The Decade’s 10 Most Influential Videogames

The 2010s were a turbulent time for videogames. Bolstered by a rapidly expanding ecosystem of online distribution marketplaces, independent games ballooned, touching every part of the industry and reshaping the entire landscape. As that happened, big-budget gaming became even bigger, costing more and simultaneously generating higher revenues. In that environment, change moved fast and freely. This list, then, can only contain a limited sample of games, just those that made the most sizable, culture-shifting impact. Big and small, old and new, these are our picks for the most influential videogames of the last decade.

10. Thirty Flights of Loving

I can’t tell you how many games I’ve played in the last decade that are clearly riffing on Thirty Flights of Loving. The first and shortest game on this list, Thirty Flights of Loving is a first-person spy thriller clocking in at just about 15 minutes. I’d be remiss to mention more, because part of the thrill of Thirty Flights is experiencing it while not fully knowing what’s going to happen. A lot of games want to be cinema, but this is one of the first to imitate cinematic tropes in a way that makes sense for the medium, that adds something instead of removing it.

What technique does it steal? A simple one: the cut. Scenes cut in and out of each other, as you abruptly shift time, place, and perspective, a change that would be routine in a film but that feels jarring and provocative in a game. It’s one of the first titles I can ever remember that required me to ask, “Wait, who am I supposed to be playing here?” A whole generation of independent games has used this trick, with fantastic results, but Thirty Flights of Loving is still thrilling. That’s the mark of a good idea.

9. Pathologic 2

Pathologic 2 is the newest game on this list, having come out in mid-2019. Which, at first glance, makes it a rough fit. After all, it hasn’t had time to influence anything. But mark my words: Pathologic 2, with its impeccable blend of terror, scarcity, and fascination, will influence a whole new crop of independent developers. A sequel/remake to an underrated Russian gem, Pathologic 2 is a game about the horror of a plague hitting a small, isolated Russian steppe village at the turn of the 20th century, or thereabouts. It’s about being a doctor who’s starving to death, and it’s about mysticism, and tradition, and colonialism. It’s a game where you can get the plague in a cloud of black dust, and then the plague whispers religious secrets in your ear, and then you die.

It’s also incredibly, engrossingly difficult. It’s a game that dares to ask whether or not games should be fun in the first place, before deciding, immediately, “Nah.” It’s not an exceptionally approachable game, but it is stunning if you can stomach it. Mixing poetic writing, stirring theatrical design, and a meditative grimness, it accomplishes feats of tone and presentation that I’ve never seen a game accomplish before. It should be lauded and imitated. I think it will be.

8. Cibele

One of my favorite trends in the past decade of games has been a move toward autobiography. Games, often, have been the purview of wild fantasies; in videogames you do things you can’t do in real life, and you gather experiences that would be impossible in any other medium. But as independent and experimental games have gained prominence, there has been an increase in the number of games dedicated to telling personal, autobiographical stories. Games that are, instead of fantasy, confessional.

Cibele, created by Nina Freeman and the team at Star Maid Games, is a powerful representative of that trend. It’s not the first, but when I think about what confessional games are and what they can do, it’s the one I always remember. Set in a lightly fictionalized version of Freeman’s own past, it’s a story of long-distance relationships, massively multiplayer online role-playing games, sexuality, and growing up. While confessional games have yet to hit the mainstream, echoes of Cibele are everywhere, whether in Nathalie Lawhead’s chaotic self-portrait games, or in titles like Emily Is Away that use the intimacy and voyeurism of a game like Cibele for different purposes entirely. There’s something painful and uncomfortable about playing games that traffic so deeply in simulated intimacy, but it’s a powerful thing to have contributed to the medium.

7. Nier

Released in 2010, Nier was the final game from Cavia, a mid-tier Japanese studio with a history of producing fascinating, broken games, a history synonymous with one of their star designers: Yoko Taro. After Nier, the studio closed, its IP picked up by studios like Square Enix, and Taro turned into a free agent, going on to create more strange, distinctive games in the Cavia mold.

But Nier, as a death throe, was a helluva last effort. One of the most distinctive Japanese role-playing games ever created, it’s ever-changeable, blending an action combat system and a melodramatic tragedy with gameplay elements that constantly change around the player. At one point it turns into a text adventure; at another, it’s a Resident Evil pastiche; for a few minutes, it’s Diablo. Not a lot of people played Nier, but those who saw past its rough edges became passionate evangelists, and its best ideas—about the power of games to change themselves, to subvert and toy with audience expectations and resist the urge to just be one thing—filtered outward.

Some of the fans it inspired were pretty prominent, as well; Yosuke Saito at Square Enix loved the game so much that he insisted that Square work with Taro on a project, which led to the game’s critically beloved sequel, our game of the year for 2017, and one of the best games of the decade, bar none: Nier Automata. But that game, and the ascendance of Yoko Taro’s eccentric design ideas, would have never happened without this one.

6. P.T.

P.T. is the only game on this list that makes a compelling argument for not being called a game at all. It is, instead, a teaser, as the title indicates (P.T. stands for Playable Teaser). An hour-long game spent in a single, eerie hallway, P.T. is still, even as just a demo, probably the most important horror game of the decade. Released without fanfare, the nondescript title was soon revealed to be a promo for a Hideo Kojima-led Silent Hill game.

And what a Silent Hill experience it promised. Using minimalism and repetition, P.T. crafts terror out of familiarity and its disruption, the unexpected and the frightening always lurking just behind the corner. For days after its release, P.T. was a mystery to be unravelled, and then it was quickly made into a legend.

Kojima’s Silent Hill game never got made, and Kojima left Konami altogether in a nasty breakup, which only adds to P.T.‘s mystique. It’s a glimpse at what could have been, and also a preview into Kojima’s future post-Konami, where he would be lauded as an auteur and given free reign to create the strange and singular Death Stranding, a game that would prominently feature Norman Reedus and Guillermo del Toro, both of whom were set to collaborate with Kojima on the Silent Hill game that never was.

5. The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild

The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild might be the game that saved Nintendo. The flagship release of the Nintendo Switch, it was a return to form for a company that found itself, after the success of the Wii, strangely directionless, flailing at ideas that never quite took off, moving out of step with its own fans and the industry it existed in. The Nintendo Switch changed that, and Breath of the Wild was the game that epitomized that change.

Moving away from the stifling format of every 3D Zelda before it, Breath of the Wild infuses its own distant past with modern trappings, creating an adventure that captures the wonder, mystery, and playfulness of the first game. It’s a stunning work, and it pushed open-world games in a more subtle, more exploratory direction than they might have gone otherwise. Breath of the Wild is the rare title that builds itself out of the moments of joy that come from seeing what’s beyond the next hill.

Playing Breath of the Wild, you can skip straight to the end, taking Link to fight Ganon after the first hour of gameplay, a brilliantly included moment of player independence. But with all the beauty and surprise to see in its massive map, why would you want to? Breath of the Wild proved that Nintendo still had it, and it remains one of the best games they’ve ever made.

4. Gone Home

Gone Home is a small, simple, lovely thing. It’s a game about a house, and the memories inside it, and about love and family lost and gained. A pillar of the genre that would go on to be called, both derisively and lovingly, the “walking simulator,” Gone Home shares as much DNA with BioShock as it does with Dear Esther. It’s a game about exploring a space, picking up on cues from it, and piecing together the past. It influenced tons of creators to create similar games that combine intimate and realistic theming with quiet, contemplative, and self-consciously non-violent play.

It’s also one of the games, alongside Depression Quest and a few others, that was held responsible for creating a massive cultural schism in games, as a nascent reactionary movement in the fandom decried it as not a game, certainly not art, and not worthy of praise or attention. That movement became Gamergate, and it was horrendous. Gone Home never deserved that legacy, nor did any of the other creators—mostly women, or otherwise marginalized—or games that ended up carrying it. Still, though: Gone Home remains a precious, compelling thing.

3. Dark Souls

For a while, it seemed like everyone wanted to make the next Dark Souls. The sort-of sequel to the cult classic Demon’s Souls, Dark Souls cemented a formula that defined gaming in the 2010s: ultra-hard difficulty, punishing but recoverable penalties on death, and as much mystery and desolation as is possible to cram into a videogame level. Done well, these elements are perfect, creating one of the best games of all time: the story of a dying world drowning in confusion, horror, and regret. Done badly, and you have a mess. The 2010s had a lot of both.

Dark Souls almost singlehandedly popularized the notion that difficulty still had a place in games, and is the shining example of indirect storytelling in the medium. Everyone immediately wanted to create games like it, and it undoubtedly launched a thousand wannabes. Was that, like, good for gaming? Honestly, I’m not sure. Dark Souls is an incredibly singular creation, one that scarcely works if you take away even one piece of its whole. But it was, certainly, inescapable.

2. Minecraft

Minecraft began development in the late 2000s, but didn’t release its 1.0 version until 2011, which is enough to quality it for this list. Developed initially by Notch Persson before he sold his development studio, Mojang, to Microsoft, Minecraft is a defining game of a decade that was dominated by creativity in games—the emergence of videogames as a means for creation, as a way for normal people who don’t even regularly play games to build their own realities full of massive sculptures, to-scale fandom replicas, and even working computers.

With nothing but a pickaxe and some determination, Minecraft drops the player into a massive procedurally generated world of blocks. Every single one of those blocks can be broken down with the right tools, turned into resources that can then be used to create. In the core game mode, this ability is mostly a means to build shelter against the roving “creepers” that come out at night, but it quickly became clear that the game put no limit on what the player could make. Whenever a game anywhere features crafting, or customized player creations, you can smell the whiff of Minecraft‘s influence in the air. This is a game that felt like, and continues to feel like, a vanguard for the idea that games can be for anyone, and can be made to do anything. Minecraft is a game anyone, of any age, could play forever. A lot of people will.

1. Fortnite

Fortnite was a joke at launch. Do you remember that? Initially perceived as a flop, Epic’s building game felt like an obvious cash-in, and when it added on a battle royale mode to mimic the success of the then-juggernaut PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds, it was even moreso. But here’s the thing: It started growing. And it kept growing, and growing, and now it’s possibly the biggest, most profitable game on the planet.

Fortnite is on the top of the list because it’s one of the only games of the decade to truly infiltrate broader pop culture. It and Minecraft are the entirety of gaming to a lot of people; they represent the beginning and the end of the medium, everything about it that’s important and fun and normal. It’s created its own celebrity culture, rocketing its biggest player, Ninja, to broad fame, and Twitch, Amazon’s massive streaming platform, has followed its success to become an even more dominant force in the gaming industry than it already was. This is the game that Drake played. This is the game that all the kids are into. This is the one that has defined an entire generation of for-profit ongoing games.

Is Fortnite‘s prominence good? Is it a good idea to have a game that’s so changeable, so constantly updating, that its pace basically requires working developers to the bone? Is it good that a game with such a clear, obvious profit motive, such a penchant for mass media crossovers and sponsorships, is the new norm? I can’t say. But as we end this decade and move onto the next, Fortnite‘s dominance shows no signs of slowing down, and its influence is just starting to show its true scope.


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