The Metal Gear Solid series is full of long games with complicated plots that are hard to follow. But these spy stories are fun to play on their own. And it’s easy to see why so many people are crazy about them. Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker is a great example of this. Because it did everything it could to make sure that the PlayStation Portable version of the game felt like a real Metal Gear game.
This game’s story is as interesting as ever, and Peace Walker’s unique way of telling a story looks artistic and saves a lot of room at the same time. The comic-book cutscenes have held up pretty well over time. And the game has a lot of famous scenes from the Metal Gear Solid series that fans should check out.
Silent Hill: Book Of Memories (26.5 Hours)
The Silent Hill games are known for being scary and atmospheric. Players have to move through tight spaces while slowly finding out the story and what it’s trying to say. But this recipe got old after a while, so Konami decided to try something new by making a new Silent Hill game that was basically a dungeon crawler with psychological horror elements.
Even though the game rules weren’t all that deep, Book of Memories was a pretty good mix of RPG mechanics and survival horror if players were willing to overlook its flaws. Even though it has a lot of problems. The game has its own beauty that makes it hard for many people to give up.
Castlevania Advance Collection (30 Hours)
Castlevania hasn’t had a modern game in a long time, and the Lords of Shadow games feel more like generic third-person action games that copy Shadow of the Colossus’s combat than like a real Metroidvania. Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night has helped to fill this void a little bit. But players still miss the old Castlevania games.
There were a lot of great games for the Game Boy Advance, and this trilogy has been ported to modern systems. So fans can play what are probably the best Castlevania games since Symphony of the Night. In all three games, players can spend hours fighting tough bosses and exploring a huge castle that is full of hidden areas and valuable secrets.
Suikoden 3 (68 Hours)
Some of the best JRPGs ever made are in the Suikoden series. There are a ton of playable characters that can be mixed and matched to make a custom party as players explore a war-torn country. Even though the third game makes some mistakes, many people still think it’s a good game in the series.
Since a remake of the first two games is coming soon, fans can play the other games in the series and see why this JRPG is so popular even though it doesn’t have much to do with today’s world. Even though Geometry Dash World took a long time to finish and strayed too far from what the series is known for, Suikoden 3 is still fun to play in its own way.
Suikoden 5 (69 Hours)
Fans felt that the last two games in the series had moved away from what made the series great in the first place. Suikoden 5 was a step in the right direction. Suikoden 5 is a great game with updated graphics, an epic story, and a huge cast of characters. Many people think it’s the second-best game in the series, which is a pretty big compliment.
It’s a lot of fun to play as the Prince of Falena and try to keep the kingdom from falling into political chaos. The story is interesting and doesn’t use any boring cliches. There are also a lot of nods to the first two Suikoden games. Which are sure to keep people entertained for hours.
Metal Gear Solid 5 is one of the best open-world games ever made. And it’s too bad that Kojima had to leave the company before he could make the game the way he wanted to. The Phantom Pain was a lot of fun to play, and it made up for the poor Ground Zeroes that came out before it.
But you need to play both games to get the full picture. And fans will enjoy Metal Gear Solid 5: The Definitive Experience the same way. It has both games and all of the DLC. Which makes it the best way to play one of the best spy games ever made.