In 1998, Wild 9 was seen by many as a weird passion project that didn’t seem to make the most out of the PS1’s capabilities. However, that’s oddly the thing that I think made Wild 9 ahead of its time. R4 definitely leaned more into the arcade side of things, but it kept things between the lines just enough to remain appealing to racing enthusiasts. At a time when games like Wipeout and Gran Turismo were pulling racing games to the polar extremes of “arcadey” and “realistic,” R4 argued for a compelling balance. However, the bigger reason that R4 belongs on this list is that it got the future of racing games right. The lighting in this game alone puts it in the running for the absolute best-looking PS1 title ever. At first, my biggest justification for including it was the fact that it is a stunningly beautiful game that pushed the PS1 to its absolute limits in 1998. After all, R4 was a fairly successful and well-reviewed game at the time of its release. I debated whether or not to include this game. Galerians was actually thinking ahead at a time when many critics accused it of treading familiar genre ground. Future survival games would certainly utilize similar concepts, but I don’t know if I’ve seen many other games that make you sympathize with your character via taking care of them quite as this one does. There were quite a few great horror games in the late ‘90s/early 2000s that were written off as “ Resident Evil knock-offs.” While it’s worth diving deeper into that particular subject another day, I feel like Galerians might be the PS1 horror game that really deserved to make a bigger impact than it actually did.īuilt around its protagonist’s psychic abilities, Galerians brilliantly utilizes a multi-tier resource system that forces you to constantly manage your character’s well-being in order to get the most out of their psychic powers. Within a couple of years, that control scheme would usher in a new era of console FPS masterpieces. Hilariously, some critics at the time even said that the game’s controls made it unplayable. It even made that control scheme the default input option whereas previous games hid lesser versions of that scheme in the options menu. While there were other PS1 games that featured similar control schemes as optional input methods ( Quake 2 and Medal of Honor), Alien Resurrection is the earliest game I know of that featured a version of that dual-analog control scheme we know and love today. While most of the game is honestly pretty forgettable, Resurrection deserves all the credit in the world for its early use of the dual-analog stick control scheme that is now standard for console FPS games everywhere. Released near the end of the PS1’s life cycle (2000), Alien Resurrection survived a trip through development hell only to be met by mediocre reviews. With that out of the way, here are 20 PS1 games that were way ahead of their time. However, preferential treatment went to games that were released exclusively or initially for the PS1.
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