Eric āeā Neustadter is the Xbox LIVE Operations Gaming Ninja. Yes, thatās actually his title. Iāve seen his business cards. Heās spent the last 11-and-a-half years working on Xbox LIVE, and his Gamertag--e--was the first one created. You can find him on Twitter as @thevowel, and you can hear him weekly on the Major Nelson Radio podcast.
The following are his Top 10 titles of 2012. These are not his 10 ābestā, but the 10 titles that he had the most fun with during the year. To be eligible, the game had to come out in 2012 on the platform he played it on. Theyāre listed in chronological order by release date.
The Darkness II
Was The Darkness II really this year? It seems like itās been longer--but Wikipedia says it was this year, so weāll go with it. I enjoyed--and finished--the original and was excited to dive back into Jackieās story. Do you enjoy comic books? If so, the ripped-from-the-comics story here is right up your alley. It had the magic quality that kept me from putting it down because I wanted to know what happened next.
The powers that you gain as you progress through the game are interesting and a blast to use. Objects in the environment can be utilized for some really entertaining kills (fan blades!).
Trials Evolution
I love games that inspire competition and smack talk between friends. Trials Evolution did that in SPADES. There was back-and-forth with my boss that just might wind up impacting my review someday. My Twitter feed was full of leaderboard screenshots going to and from @jack_p and others. The original Trials HD was an outstanding game, and with Evolution the developers addressed my only serious complaint--the difficulty spike. Evolution has a much smoother learning curve.
The fact that Trials Evolution was able to get me to play a single level OVER AND OVER AGAIN to improve my time by .01 seconds is a testament to the magic that theyāve captured.
The Walking Dead
Iāve read all the comics, and Iām an on-and-off watcher of the TV show. Iām a fan of zombie stories in general, yet I didnāt get around to playing the game until very recently. Iām not normally a big fan of this style of games, but TWD is so good that I didnāt care. Youāll be really upset by some of the choices that youāll have to make, and thatās something special.
Spelunky
Spelunky was probably responsible for more rage and obscenities pouring from my mouth than any other game in 2012. I LOVE IT FOR THAT. Iām not normally one for intensely difficult games, but for some reason Iāve always had a soft spot for roguelikes.
Every time I die in Spelunky, I feel like itās my fault and not the game being unfair. Thatās a tremendous accomplishment in game design. All the information I needed to survive was on-screen, I just wasnāt paying attention or interpreting it properly. Thatās vastly different than knowing what I need to do, but being unable to execute it (whether itās because I have bad reflexes or because the controls are questionable). Except for the dark levels--SCREW THOSE.
Mark of the Ninja
I missed Mark of the Ninja entirely when it came out. I didnāt first play it until my Extra Life marathon, when it was a game I was sponsored to play. It turns out that I love it!
Mark of the Ninja has a spectacular style. The graphics and audio are both top-notch, and fit each other beautifully. I really love the mechanic of guards hearing you being more important than them seeing you. Thatās what a ninja game should be all about. The controls are also really tight and intuitive.
FTL: Faster Than Light
Iām proud to say that I backed FTL back when it was on Kickstarter. A roguelike in space? Sign me up!
(Itās the second roguelike on my list--I thought 2012 was the Year of the Bow, but perhaps itās Year of the Roguelike?)
FTL is the ultimate ājust one more playthroughā game. You might not want to play it when youāre alone, as you can easily find yourself losing entire evenings.
Borderlands 2
Whatās not to love? Borderlands introduced us to the amazing, colorful world of Pandora. It was a co-op romp unlike anything Iād played before. Borderlands 2 brings more of what I loved in the original to the table, but ramps everything up to 11.
Better graphics. Better controls. Even more insane weapons. Possibly the best co-op experience of this generation (although thatās a lofty claim and really needs a list of its own).
XCOM: Enemy Unknown
Many times developers have revisited favorite games from my childhood. Rarely is it successful. Any developer considering doing such a thing needs to play XCOM:EU over and over again. Not only is it a brilliant game, but itās faithful to the 1994 original at the same time.
I think the highest praise that I can give XCOM:EU is to say that I expect Iāll still be playing it years from now, much like I do with Civilization to this day.
Dishonored
Dishonored was my favorite new IP of 2012. It snuck up on me, too. Until seeing it demoāed at E3 2012 I really didnāt know anything about it. I walked away from that demo excited and curious, and they delivered.
In Dishonored the developers really delivered on the promise of giving the player choice in how to play the game. Want to finish the level without being seen? You can do that. Want to go in weapons and powers blazing? You can do that too. The powers you build during the game are interesting, and the story grabbed my attention.
Halo 4
I admit it--Iām a Halo fanboy. Iāve been playing the franchise since before the first game launched in 2001, and I practically had a second job playing Halo 2 multiplayer when I wasnāt doing my real job. Iāve played all the games, Iāve read all the novels. I was really excited to get back to the story of Master Chief and Halo 4 didnāt disappoint me.
The single-player campaign sets up some great themes for the new trilogy. While the Covenant are still around, thereās a new enemy who youāll be very familiar with if youāve read the Greg Bear Halo novels. If you havenāt read them and love good sci-fi--do it!
The multiplayer is--in my opinion--the finest Halo multiplayer yet. Itās an evolution of whatās come before, and is the most fun Iāve had playing Halo online in years.
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