11

I've always felt as though I'm unable to fully enjoy RPGs. Final Fantasy is one of my favourite series of games, but outside of that it's pretty limited. Undertale was probably the last RPG I played that I liked, mostly because it did something different with the combat system and the puzzle aspects weren't too over the top. I feel the same way about CrossCode, but I would put that game into a different category as it isn't a traditional RPG.

I just don't want to sink a ton of time into a game that is mostly a grind with story elements and payoffs that are few and far between when I could play a different kind of game that is at least continuously stimulating.

I've always felt as though I'm unable to fully enjoy RPGs. Final Fantasy is one of my favourite series of games, but outside of that it's pretty limited. Undertale was probably the last RPG I played that I liked, mostly because it did something different with the combat system and the puzzle aspects weren't too over the top. I feel the same way about CrossCode, but I would put that game into a different category as it isn't a traditional RPG. I just don't want to sink a ton of time into a game that is mostly a grind with story elements and payoffs that are few and far between when I could play a different kind of game that is at least continuously stimulating.

37 comments

[–] jobes 1 points (+1|-0)

CrossCode for 2D Action Puzzle RPG.

Golf Story for a casual, more relaxed RPG.

Charles Barkley Shut Up and Jam: Gaiden for JRPG.

Tyranny for a Reading-Intensive RPG. It's relatively short and sweet with maybe 40-60 hours for a play through, depending on how deep you want to get in the story. It has huge replay value too, as there are 3 completely different paths to take for the game.