It's been about 5 and a half years since I did my last Top 100 list. Due to my OCD and compulsion to constantly create lists in my head I think it's time for an all new Top 100.

My first thought was to reevaluate the old top 100, but fuck it, it's easier to pick 100 new games that I didn't have on the list last time. In the past 5 and a half years I've played more than I usually have, largely due to COVID. And in that time I've played a lot of new great games.

Plus, when I made the last list, I avoided adding multiple games from the same franchises. So I can dip back into the Dragon Quest pool and a few others.

Anyway stay tuned. Starting tomorrow we're doing this shit again.
Posted by robio Fri, 15 Mar 2024 01:46:14 (comments: 234)
<< prev
 
Mon, 09 Jun 2025 15:38:21
I have the Atari 2600 version of Double Dragon. It's technically kinda impressive but brutally difficult.

I have the Arcade Archives Double Dragon too but it's really difficult to go back to it after Streets of Rage and Final Fight series. Still lots of nostalgia playing it in the arcade with my high school friends, though. 2-player is best.
 
Tue, 10 Jun 2025 16:32:08
robio said:
#41 - Willow (arcade)

maxresdefault.jpg

In the late '80s and well into the 90's, there was no better developer for third-party licenses than Capcom. In fact, I think I already said that when I mentioned Little Nemo for the NES. But if I'm repeating myself, it's because it's true. And to further make my point, I present there arcade version of Willow.

Sure, it might have been a little difficult, but it was well worth feeding that machine quarters. You got to switch between Willow and Madmartigan, each of whom had a completely different play style. The level design was great, the graphics were some of the best arcades had to offer at the time, bosses were huge and filled the screen, and the music was excellent.

It's really a damn shame that we never got a home port of the arcade version. To their credit though, Capcom did release a very good Willow for the NES, that felt like a more fleshed out though more linear version of The Legend of Zelda. Anyway if haven't you weren't lucky enough to stumble across this in the arcades, it might be worth hinting down and checking out now.

That game was cool from what I remember of it. I only saw it in a movie theater lobby once  but ended up playing it for 20 minutes or so. If it came out on SNES, I would have bought it for sure.

 
Thu, 12 Jun 2025 00:00:02
#36 - Bionic Commando

MV5BMTk4OWE1ODEtZjYwZS00MGZmLTk0NTQtZjZkZWVhMDlhYjA1XkEyXkFqcGc@._V1_FMjpg_UX1000_.jpg

I think Bionic Commando might have been my most rented game as a kid. I never owned my own copy of it, but I spent some serious time with it all the same, largely due to its availability at Blockbuster and another mom and pop video store. I utterly loved it.

And what wasn't to love? You had a collection of cool guns, and while you couldn't jump you had maybe the greatest accessory of the 8-Bit era -- the bionic arm. It set players up for some of the most cruel precision platforming of all time, but it could pay off huge too. Those moments where you were free-falling only to save yourself at the last minute with a well-placed swing gave you a rush that I can only assume is comparable to a really good line of coke. Oh and if that wasn't enough, you got to fight Hitler.

My quest to get to the end was one of the great struggles of childhood. My cousin and I inadvertently figured out how to get a bunch of continues, and one night we had passed a very difficult level - The one level that takes place at night where you have to do some complete leap of faith swings. At that point we felt like we were inches away from beating the game, but we had to take a break for some reason. So we left the game on, but turned off the TV planning to return later. Unfortunately his little sister ended up seeing the NES on and did her duty by turning it off. Got to save electricity after all. Truly a heartbreaking moment.

But don't worry, Hitler got what was coming to him. I got him good with the bazooka.
 
Thu, 12 Jun 2025 00:01:09
Ravenprose said:

That game was cool from what I remember of it. I only saw it in a movie theater lobby once  but ended up playing it for 20 minutes or so. If it came out on SNES, I would have bought it for sure.


It was always a source of disappointment that we never got a home console version of the arcade game. The NES version was good, don't get me wrong. But there was something about the arcade game that just felt so much more accurate to the movie.
<< prev
Log in or Register for free to comment
Recently Spotted:
robio (5m)
Login @ The VG Press
Username:
Password:
Remember me?