Call me pretentious if you must, but I love the IGF season. Indie games are usually the most innovative and fun games coming out these days, and considering that this year no one had to compete against Minecraft, I actually felt interested in checking out the list. So, after going through all 550+ entries, here were some of the more interesting ones. Some I’ve played, some I own but haven’t, and others look really interesting and give me reason to try them. Still, here’s my personal choice for “Cream of the Crop” games:
Games I’ve played this year:
- Capsized: Saskatchewan-made platformer that created a breathtaking atmosphere through art and music.
- Dustforce: A cruel and demanding, yet beautiful and fun platformer. Requires perfection, but still fairly relaxing to play.
- GIRP: Rock climbing sim composed of making good decisions and button memory.
- Lightfish: A very advanced version of Jezzball, and while it is a short game, it is good fun.
- Mos Speedrun: A platformer for the iPad that does mobile controls well.
- Q.U.B.E.: First person puzzle game that looks like Portal, but lacks a story yet has more puzzle elements.
- Rock of Ages: Combination of tower defense and racing, with Monty Python style cutscenes about history!
- Solar 2: A solar system simulator that gives you enough laughs and gameplay missions to hold your interest.
- SpaceChem: A hard puzzle game, but a great concept with very methodical thinking required.
- Xotic: Crazy arcade score competitions inside of a first person shooter.
Games I’ve heard good things about:
- Blocks that Matter: I actually had this game gifted to me at Christmas, and it caught my eye as a puzzle game with a really interesting premise.
- Creavures: Artistic, nonviolent platformer. Own it, and the first level was quite fascinating and different.
- Serious Sam Double D: 2D sidescrolling shooter with ridiculous weapons. Own it, and need to play it more.
- Serious Sam: The Random Encounter: JRPG spin on the Serious Sam series with 8-bit graphics. Own it, need to play it.
Games I’m interested to check out:
- Beat Sneak Bandit: A music based game for mobile devices that requires rhythm and timing to beat, and games like that are always fun.
- Blink: First person platforming which, when done right, is quite fun.
- Bumpy Road: A mobile driving game where you control the road as opposed to the vehicle.
- Crashtastic: 3D physics based puzzle game. What’s not to like about it?
- Dear Esther: An interactive storytelling experience. Coming to Steam Feb. 14, and will probably pick it up day one.
- Fingle: A kind of twist on Twister, except meant for two peoples’ fingers on an iPad.
- Prom Night: Social interaction sim where, unlike The Sims, past experiences affect future decisions and relationships.
- Retro City Rampage: ”Grand Theft Auto meets Super Mario meets… well, just about EVERYTHING!”. Looks like crazy, simple fun.
- Spelunky: Platformer with randomly generated levels each time you play it.
- Stay in the Light: Platformer with a LIMBO art style and a gameplay twist summed up best by its title.
- Twirdie: Simple golf game where the distance you hit the ball is based on you guessing a word and seeing how often it appeared on Twitter in the past minute.
- Wonderputt: Crazy looking mini-golf game. Need I say more?
A little later I might adventurous and make predictions on winners, but we shall see. I’m confident of some of the categories, but some I don’t have much experience in.