List of video games considered artistic
This is a list of video games considered to be works of art by art critics and video game reviewers. Although several countries offer legal protections to video games which are similar or identical to protections offered to other artistic works, and although by this standard all video games can be considered as art, this article lists games that have been specifically identified by art critics and video game reviewers as works of art. The term "art game" as used in reference to a distinct genre of video games was first used academically in 2002. This list does not include visual novels, which are considered an independent art form within the video game industry.[1]
20th century[edit]
Title | Year | Developer(s) | Original platform(s)[lower-alpha 1] | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tempest | 1981 | Atari | Arcade | An arcade tube shooter with vector graphics. PBS Idea Channel described it as a strongly aesthetic experience, comparing it to paintings.[2] |
Super Mario Bros. | 1985 | Nintendo | NES | A side-scrolling platform game released as a launch title for the NES, Super Mario Bros. became the most praised game in the original Mario series for its 8-bit visuals, power-ups, and aesthetic charm. The game has its own spot in the Smithsonian American Art Museum in an exhibition called The Art of Video Games.[3] |
Another World | 1991 | Delphine Software | Atari ST, Amiga | Also known as Out of this World, this cinematic platformer about a human scientist struggling to survive in an alien world was praised for its rotoscoped animations, unique atmosphere, and visual storytelling, and was admitted into the Museum of Modern Art in 2013.[4][5] It was highly influential, inspiring Fumito Ueda to create Ico, another game considered artistic.[6][7] |
Myst | 1993 | Cyan | Mac OS | Beginning in 1993 with Myst and followed by Riven in 1997 and four additional sequels through 2005, the series is a graphic adventure based on pre-rendered scenarios and a strongly atmospheric, immersive setting.[8][9][10] The level of detail allowed by the use of CD-ROM as the storage media was a technical achievement at the time, praised for the way the limitations of the format were overcome and used as part of the game story.[11] |
Doom | 1993 | id Software | PC | A violent first-person shooter whose transgressive thrills make it, according to The Guardian games editor Keith Stewart, "natural heir to the splatterhouse cinema of the pre-digital era".[12] |
Cosmology of Kyoto | 1993 | Softedge | Mac OS, PC | An open-world graphic adventure exploring Japanese myths in ancient Kyoto. Together with Myst, it was reviewed by film critic Roger Ebert in a column on whether video games can be considered art.[13] |
Chrono Trigger | 1995 | Square | Super NES | A Japanese role-playing game about a group of adventurers from different time periods trying to prevent the end of the world. The game has been praised for its multi-ending plot, graphics, art direction by Akira Toriyama, and soundtrack by Yasunori Mitsuda.[14][15][16][17][18][19][20] |
Yoshi's Island | 1995 | Nintendo | Super NES | A side-scrolling platforming game lauded for its explorative gameplay, moving soundtrack, and detailed, expressive visuals.[21][22] |
Super Mario 64 | 1996 | Nintendo | Nintendo 64 | The first Super Mario game to use fully 3D graphics, this influential platform game features open-ended, free-roaming environments and a cartoony aesthetic. It convinced Valve president Gabe Newell that video games were art,[23] and was featured in The Art of Video Games exhibit at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.[3] The game's highly intricate movement system allows speedrunners to greatly express themselves.[24] |
Castlevania: Symphony of the Night | 1997 | Konami | PlayStation | A cult classic JRPG game praised for its atmospheric graphics, intricate story, massive free-to-explore game world, and evocative soundtrack.[25][26] |
Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee | 1997 | Oddworld Inhabitants | PlayStation | A cinematic platform game set on the fictional planet of Oddworld, praised for its visual style and innovative gameplay.[27] |
Final Fantasy VII | 1997 | Square | PlayStation | Considered by many to be one of the best role-playing video games of all time, its story includes the death of a major character, which aimed to give the player an emotional stake in the game.[2][28] |
Grim Fandango | 1998 | LucasArts | PC | An adventure game which combines elements of film noir with aspects of Aztec mythology.[29] |
Oddworld: Abe's Exoddus | 1998 | Oddworld Inhabitants | PlayStation | Sequel to Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee and first video game with its animated sequences to be considered for nomination in the Academy Awards.[30] |
Panzer Dragoon Saga | 1998 | Team Andromeda | Sega Saturn | A role-playing game set in a post-apocalyptic world populated with dragons, acclaimed for its immersive world and story.[31][32] It was featured in The Art of Video Games exhibit at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.[3] |
Xenogears | 1998 | Square | PlayStation | A Japanese role-playing game that follows the protagonist Fei Fong Wong and several others as they journey across the world to overthrow the all-powerful rule of Solaris and uncover mysteries concerning their world. The story incorporates themes of Jungian psychology, Freudian thought, and religious symbolism. The game received critical acclaim due to its "thought-provoking" storyline, gameplay, characters, animated cutscenes, soundtrack and psychological and religious themes.[33][34][35][36] |
Planescape: Torment | 1999 | Black Isle Studios | PC | A cult-classic role-playing video game that was praised for its detailed writing, defined characters, unique setting, and the use of death to progress the story.[37] |
Vib Ribbon | 1999 | NanaOn-Sha | PlayStation | A rhythm game known for its unique vector graphics art style. Vib Ribbon was collected as part of a video game exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art.[38] |
2000–2005[edit]
Title | Year | Developer(s) | Original platform(s)[lower-alpha 1] | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Deus Ex | 2000 | Ion Storm | PC | An action role-playing video game praised for its deep gameplay, complex and thought-provoking story, philosophical dialogue, and its use of multiple solutions to situations based on the free will of the player, which allows for its tasks and missions to be completed in a variety of ways, which in turn lead to differing outcomes.[39][40][41][42] It was nominated for the Smithsonian American Art Museum's exhibition, The Art of Video Games.[43][44] |
Galatea | 2000 | Emily Short | Z-machine | A self-published interactive fiction game based on interactions with a single character in a single room. Rock, Paper, Shotgun analyzed it as an art game, saying that it "transcends that" and calling it "literature" and "not an art game [but] a game about art".[45] |
Max Payne | 2001 | Remedy Entertainment | PC | A third-person shooter praised for its use of neo-noir storytelling devices[46] and its thematic connections and frequent references to Norse mythology. |
Silent Hill 2 | 2001 | Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo | PlayStation 2 | A survival horror video game which has been considered a work of art due to its story, atmosphere, sound design, exploration of psychological ideas such as the subconscious, and its use of psychological horror, metaphors, and taboo topics such as incest and domestic violence.[47][48] |
Ico | 2001 | Japan Studio Team Ico |
PlayStation 2 | A minimalist game about a boy and girl who try to escape a ruined castle, Ico is frequently cited as an example of art in games due to its immersive gameplay, evoking narrative, and unique and influential design elements.[49][50][51] |
Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty | 2001 | Konami | PlayStation 2 | A stealth game by Hideo Kojima that has been cited as a primary example of artistic expression in video games and an early example of post-modernism in video games.[52][4][53][54] The game is often considered ahead of its time for having anticipated themes and concepts that later became culturally relevant in the 2010s, such as social media,[55] news feeds, post-truth politics,[53] fake news, echo chambers, and alternative facts.[56][57] |
The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker | 2002 | Nintendo | GameCube | An action-adventure game in the Legend of Zelda franchise where the player sails across a flooded land, using a magic baton to control the winds. The game received critical acclaim for its timeless cel-shaded visuals, which have been compared to the works of Hayao Miyazaki, as well as its mature narrative.[22][58][59][60] The game was featured at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in an exhibition titled The Art of Video Games.[61] |
Yume Nikki | 2004 | Kikiyama | PC | An independently developed freeware game that has the player explore the dreams of a hikikomori little girl known only as "Madotsuki" as she encounters numerous surreal creatures, locations, and events while collecting "Effects", most of which do little more than alter her appearance.[62] |
The Endless Forest | 2005 | Tale of Tales | PC | Originally commissioned for an art exhibition, The Endless Forest is a multiplayer online game in which the player controls a stag in a peaceful forest and interacts with other players entirely through sounds and body language. All players are recognizable by their unique symbols and customized appearance, but are otherwise anonymous. Dubbed a "social screensaver", the game has been considered an MMORPG in the loosest sense of the term, though it shares few things in common with more mainstream MMORPGs.[63] |
Killer7 | 2005 | Grasshopper Manufacture | GameCube, PlayStation 2 | An action-adventure game by director Goichi Suda that has often been described as "thought-provoking" and "arthouse", and is cited as a work of art due to its plot involving heavy themes of politics and death.[64][65] |
Pathologic | 2005 | Ice-Pick Lodge | PC | A psychological horror adventure survival role-playing game set in a town which is befallen by a strange lethal sickness known as the "sand plague". The story tells of three different characters who try to uncover the source of the sickness and is full of staginess and symbolism.[66][67] |
Psychonauts | 2005 | Double Fine Productions | PC, Xbox | A narrative-driven action-adventure platform game where the main character explores people's minds. Though initially a commercial failure, the game gained a cult following for its unique level design, art, and humor.[68][69] |
2006–2010[edit]
Title | Year | Developer(s) | Original platform(s)[lower-alpha 1] | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ōkami | 2006 | Clover Studio | PlayStation 2 | An adventure game based on Japanese mythology, the game's graphics were designed to appear similar to sumi-e watercolor paintings, and incorporated art-based brushstrokes by the player to execute special moves.[70][71] |
Shadow of the Colossus | 2006 | Team Ico | PlayStation 2 | A spiritual successor to 2001's Ico, Shadow of the Colossus is regarded as an important work of art due to its minimalist landscape designs, strong aesthetic, immersive gameplay, powerful narrative, and emotional journey. It has been referenced numerous times in debates regarding art and video games.[72] |
Mother 3 | 2006 | Brownie Brown HAL Laboratory |
Game Boy Advance | The sequel to EarthBound (known as Mother 2 in Japan), Mother 3 is a role-playing game about the story of one of two twin boys as he, his pet dog, and his friends battle an occupying dictatorship. The game has been praised for its in-depth narrative and use of 16-bit graphics.[73] It is heavy with themes including the importance of a mother, moral fungibility, and dualisms such as nature vs. technology and feudalism vs. capitalism, and is frequently compared to a form of literature.[73][74] Despite never officially being released outside of Japan, it was later fan-translated by a group of EarthBound fans. Both it and its predecessor served as inspirations for several other games, including Yume Nikki and Undertale. |
Dwarf Fortress | 2006 | Tarn Adams | PC, Mac OS X, Linux | A roguelike city-building game where the player creates an expansive world each play-through, allowing them to envision the history and culture for their civilization each time around.[2] |
BioShock | 2007 | 2K Boston 2K Australia |
PC, Xbox 360 | A spiritual successor to System Shock 2, the game is regarded as an important work of art due to its immersive atmosphere, compelling storytelling,[according to whom?] and the narrative deconstruction of linear gameplay.[75] |
Portal | 2007 | Valve | PC, Xbox 360 | A puzzle game involving the use of portals to transport the player between distant points in space. The game has been praised for its innovative mechanics, narrative and storytelling, and writing, especially that of the AI character GLaDOS.[76][77] Portal was featured as part of the Museum of Modern Art exhibit "Applied Design".[78] |
Fallout 3 | 2008 | Bethesda Game Studios | PC, Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 | An action role-playing game acclaimed for its steampunk/retrofuturistic design and credible reconstruction and visuals of post-apocalyptic Washington, D.C.[79] In 2012, Fallout 3 was also exhibited in The Art of Video Games at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.[80] |
Braid | 2008 | Number None | Xbox 360 | A puzzle-platform game which uses time manipulation as its core mechanic. The game is notable for its painterly art style, layered philosophical narrative, and unique approach to game design.[81][82] |
Windosill | 2009 | Vectorpark | PC, Mac OS X, Linux, browser, iOS | A puzzle game in which the player advances through eleven different rooms by interacting with each level's environmental objects. Developer Patrick Smith was inspired by a variety of painters and artists. The game received "universal acclaim" according to video game review score aggregator Metacritic,[83] with reviewers noting the game's especially short duration, memorability, art style, and emphasis on exploration over problem-solving. |
Flower | 2009 | thatgamecompany | PlayStation 3 | The player "controls" a gust of wind through motion controls, guiding it to various flowers around a landscape to gather petals. The gameplay was designed to provoke an emotional response from the player, and was chosen as one of the games shown at The Art of Video Games exhibit at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.[84] |
Noby Noby Boy | 2009 | Namco Bandai Games | PlayStation 3, iOs | An experimental art game about a worm like creature known as Boy. The player uses the analog sticks to control the front and back end of Boy allowing him to stretch out and around the objects in the level. The player can then submit the amount they've stretched online to increase the length of a character known as Girl whose length is persistent amongst all players. Girl starts on earth and stretches out into the solar system unlocking new levels for all players when she reaches a new planet. [85] |
The Path | 2009 | Tale of Tales | PC, Mac OS X | A psychological horror game inspired by several versions of the fairy tale Little Red Riding Hood; a visionary reflection about the loss of childhood innocence between fable and horror.[86] |
Deadly Premonition | 2010 | Access Games | Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 | An open-world survival horror game that was described as "the strangest video game of the year" and a primary example of "games as art", praised for its "emotional range, from traditional survival horror scares to farcical comedy".[87] |
Heavy Rain | 2010 | Quantic Dream | PlayStation 3 | An interactive movie where the player enters quick time events during various sequences, including intense, rapid-paced scenes. The results of the player's choices or actions can cause one of the four main characters to die while the story continues on, causing the player to become invested in the game's story.[2] |
Limbo | 2010 | Playdead | Xbox 360 | A puzzle-platformer with a surreal horror atmosphere and art style, noted for cinematic visual influences such as film noir and German Expressionism.[88][89] |
Amnesia: The Dark Descent | 2010 | Frictional Games | PC, Mac OS X, Linux | A survival horror game praised for its horror elements, particularly its atmosphere and sound, with many critics regarding it as one of their scariest experiences.[90] |
2011–2015[edit]
Title | Year | Developer(s) | Original platform(s)[lower-alpha 1] | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
L.A. Noire | 2011 | Team Bondi | Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PC | The game is set in Los Angeles in 1947 and is known for its presentation, which utilizes elements found in noir films popular in the 1940s and 1950s.[91] |
Child of Eden | 2011 | Q Entertainment | Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 | A rail shooter music game similar to Rez in which players shoot at various targets which produce melodic sounds upon destruction. As with Rez, it was designed to evoke the feeling of synesthesia.[92] |
The Cat and the Coup | 2011 | Peter Brinson Kurosh ValaNejad |
PC | A documentary puzzle game about the life of Mohammad Mosaddegh, who was Prime Minister of Iran in the early 1950s.[93] |
Papo & Yo | 2012 | Minority Media Inc. | PlayStation 3 | It tells a personal story about love, loss, and growth.[94] |
Dear Esther | 2012 | The Chinese Room | PC, Mac OS X | A minimalist first-person exploration game centered around its graphical environment and story. The narrative is provided through monologues as the player journeys through the environment.[95][96] |
Gravity Rush | 2012 | Japan Studio (Team Gravity) | PlayStation Vita | An open-world action-adventure game featuring a female protagonist with the power to manipulate how gravity affects her, and who uses her powers to help the people of Hekseville against the mysterious Nevi, ultimately helping its people against human threats and uncovering the mystery behind her past. The art, music, and themes of the game have been cited for its status as art.[97] |
Journey | 2012 | thatgamecompany | PlayStation 3 | Journey has been described as an emotional experience, due to its immersive setting (a vast empty desert), distinctive visual style, dynamic music which responds to the player's actions, and de-emphasized gameplay. A central mechanic is that players are able to cooperate with other real-life players on the same journey, but cannot communicate with them via speech or text until after the game's credits, which was praised for forging a sense of companionship between anonymous players.[98] |
The Unfinished Swan | 2012 | Giant Sparrow Santa Monica Studio |
PlayStation 3 | The game starts with a completely white space in which the player, a boy named Monroe, is chasing after a swan that has escaped a painting. The player has to splat gobs of black paint to draw and materialize the world around him.[99][100] |
Spec Ops: The Line | 2012 | Yager Development | PC, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 | A third-person shooter that deconstructs the "shooter genre". Inspired by Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, Spec Ops: The Line dwells heavily on themes of moral ambiguity as the player finds themselves struggling to justify their actions in the plot.[101][102][103] |
The Walking Dead | 2012 | Telltale Games | PC, Mac OS X, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PlayStation Vita | An episodic adventure game set in the world of Robert Kirkman's acclaimed comic book series, The Walking Dead has been praised for its story, meaningful player decisions, and believable characters. It is often considered one of the greatest examples of storytelling in video games.[104] |
The Cat Lady | 2012 | Harvester Games | PC | A horror point-and-click adventure game about depression, death, friendship, suicide, etc., with an underground graphic style.[105] |
BioShock Infinite | 2013 | Irrational Games | PC, Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Mac OS X | A first-person shooter set in 1912 in an alternate universe where American Exceptionalism is flourishing aboard the flying city Columbia. The game's narrative challenges concepts of nationalism, religion, and racism prevalent during that period, providing a "funhouse mirror of American ideological history", according to Ben Popper of The Verge.[106][107] |
Grand Theft Auto V | 2013 | Rockstar North | PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, later for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, PC, PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S. | Rockstar Games' open-world crime-based title satirizes the modern-day lifestyle of the West Coast of the United States, taking place in a city that is a smaller-scale but detailed stylization of the city of Los Angeles and its vicinity, often used by players and artists as a backdrop for their own creations.[108][109] |
Papers, Please | 2013 | 3909 LLC | PC, Mac OS X, Linux | A border control simulation game where a political uprising plot develops in the background of mechanical, grinding gameplay that mimics the mechanical, repetitive work of an immigration officer in a fictional country, presenting the player with ethical and moral choices between job and family.[110] |
Proteus | 2013 | Ed Key David Kanaga |
PC, Mac OS X, Linux, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Vita | A procedurally generated walking simulator game that allows players to explore an expanse of musical environment, where every creature and plant has its own unique musical signature to accompany it, resulting in changes according to where players explore.[111] |
Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons | 2013 | Starbreeze Studios | Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PC | A story-driven game praised for its visual style, gameplay, and "sedate" pace, the game has no intelligible dialogue and provides players with a powerful, emotive experience. It drew comparisons to Ico, Journey, and Fable.[112] |
Gone Home | 2013 | The Fullbright Company | PC, Mac OS X, Linux | An exploration game where the player takes the role of a teenaged girl returning to her unoccupied home after spending time abroad. Gone Home has been praised for its narration, gameplay, and atmosphere.[113] |
The Stanley Parable | 2013 | Galactic Cafe | PC, Mac OS X | A walking simulator game praised as a thought-provoking narration on the nature of choice and predestination within video games, and defined as a "meta-game where is not the gamer to play the game, but the game to play the gamer".[114] |
Flappy Bird | 2013 | .GEARS | Android, iOS | An arcade-style mobile game now present in both the collections of the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Museum of Modern Art.[115] |
The Vanishing of Ethan Carter | 2014 | The Astronauts | PC, PlayStation 4 | A first-person mystery adventure game that has been praised for its realistic graphics, atmospheric open world, and suspenseful narrative.[116][117] |
Kentucky Route Zero | 2013–2020 | Cardboard Computer | PC, Mac OS X, Linux | An indie episodic point-and-click adventure game with a focus on storytelling and a "beautiful", immersive atmosphere. The game features a twisting, self-referential narrative,[118] as well as deep characterization through evocative dialogue. Kentucky Route Zero was named Game of the Year in 2013 by Rock, Paper, Shotgun.[119] |
Elegy for a Dead World | 2014 | Dejobaan Games | PC, Mac OS X, Linux | A side-scrolling exploration game where the player writes a diary visible to other players. The player explores three worlds inspired by romantic poets Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lord Byron, and John Keats. While exploring, the player is prompted to make notes on their observations; notes are publicly visible via Steam Workshop. The collective note-taking mechanic, representing not only an artistic game experience but also the ability of sandbox-style games to support further collaborative artistic creation by their players, earned it an honorable mention for the Nuovo Award at the 2014 Independent Games Festival.[120][121] |
Monument Valley | 2014 | ustwo games | iOS, Android | An indie puzzle game where the player leads the princess Ida through mazes of optical illusions and impossible objects while manipulating the world around her to reach various platforms. Its visual style was inspired by Japanese prints, minimalist sculpture, and indie games Windosill, Fez, and Sword & Sworcery, and was compared by critics to M. C. Escher drawings and Echochrome.[122] The art was designed such that each frame would be worthy of public display. The game received generally favorable reviews. Critics praised its art and sound design. It won the BAFTA Video Game Awards for best "British Game" and "Mobile/Handheld Game", while nominated for "Best Game", "Artistic Achievement", and "Original Property" awards.[123] |
The Talos Principle | 2014 | Croteam | Microsoft Windows, OS X, Linux, Android, PlayStation 4, iOS, Xbox One | The Talos Principle is a narrative-based puzzle game,[124] played from a first- or third-person perspective.[125][126] The player takes the role of a robot with a seemingly human consciousness[127] as they explore a number of environments that include over 120 puzzles.[128] The game features a philosophical storyline. It takes its name from Talos of Greek mythology, a giant mechanical man who protected Europa in Crete from pirates and invaders. Other names taken from mythology and religion and used in the game include Elohim, Gehenna, Milton, Samsara, and Uriel.[129] |
Never Alone | 2014 | Upper One Games | Microsoft Windows, OS X, Linux, Android, iOS, PlayStation 3, Playstation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch | A side-scrolling adventure game in which the player controls an Alaskan Iñupiaq child looking to stop a blizzard from destroying their village. Throughout the story the child connects with an arctic fox and learns stories of the history of the Iñupiaq people. The game has been praised for its storytelling and its unique artistic style inspired by Alaskan culture.[130] |
Beyond Eyes | 2015 | Tiger & Squid | Xbox One, PC, Mac OS X, Linux, PlayStation 4 | An adventure game centered on a blind girl exploring her environment, where her other four senses are visualized in unique ways for the player.[131] |
Her Story | 2015 | Sam Barlow | PC, Mac OS X, iOS | An interactive film which incorporates police procedural elements and live-action footage, in which the player controls a police interrogation database and must piece together how a murder occurred through entering keyword searches. The game was praised for its unique system of storytelling, character performance, and unconventional gameplay mechanics.[132][133] |
The Beginner's Guide | 2015 | Everything Unlimited Ltd. | PC, Mac OS X | An exploration game by Davey Wreden, creator of The Stanley Parable, in which Wreden himself narrates the player through several eccentric, uncompleted games by a recluse developer named Coda, with Wreden ascribing what these games mean about Coda's personality. The nature of the story reflects on the relationship between player and developer in modern game development, with elements of Wreden's own sudden success with The Stanley Parable.[134] |
Undertale | 2015 | Toby Fox | PC, Mac OS X | A role-playing game where multiple in-game decisions by the player result in many different consequences, including but not limited to the actions of non-player characters, the mood and atmosphere of the game, and the ending. Undertale's premise is built around the idea of the player choosing whether or not to kill or spare enemies, and its overarching story is held together by themes of determination, mercy, and consequence. It also features an additional metastory hidden across the game's files and code.[135][136] |
Ori and the Blind Forest | 2015 | Moon Studios | PC, Xbox One | A 2D open-world platform game where the player controls an orphan named Ori, a white guardian spirit. The game was critically acclaimed for its gorgeous art, touching narrative, and clever gameplay.[137] |
2016–present[edit]
Title | Year | Developer(s) | Original platform(s)[lower-alpha 1] | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
That Dragon, Cancer | 2016 | Numinous Games | PC, Mac OS X, Ouya, iOS | An exploration game designed by Ryan and Amy Green to help share their experiences in learning and coping with the terminal cancer and death of their five-year-old son Joel.[138] |
Abzû | 2016 | Giant Squid | PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, Microsoft Windows | An adventure game set in the ocean, the player controlling a silent diver to explore the different ocean environments by interacting with nature.[139] |
Bound | 2016 | Plastic Studios | PlayStation 4 | Bound is a platform and art video game featuring a dancer as the main character. It was developed by Plastic Studios, published by Sony Interactive Entertainment and released on August 16, 2016, for the PlayStation 4. The game received mostly positive critical reviews, praising its art style and originality. "It’s like an M.C. Escher painting colliding with Bauhaus".[140] "Bound is digital art installation" [141] |
1979 Revolution: Black Friday | 2016 | iNK Stories | Microsoft Windows, OS X | An interactive drama game set in Iran during the 1979 Iranian Revolution, the game was particularly praised for its accurate portrayal of the events of the revolution, allowing players to become fully immersed in its setting.[142] |
No Man's Sky | 2016 | Hello Games | PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC | An open-world space exploration game inspired by 1960s and 1970s sci-fi comic books. Players can explore over 18 quintillion procedurally generated planets while choosing the path of explorer, trader, or fighter.[143][144] |
Firewatch | 2016 | Campo Santo | PlayStation 4 | "Firewatch is about solitude and space, a first-person journey through the massive wilderness of America's Shoshone National Forest. It's a space of such magnitude that it almost unavoidably conjures mysteries and conspiracies of corresponding size. But in this game, we are drawn back down to the essential and human."[145] |
The Witness | 2016 | Thekla, Inc. | PC, PlayStation 4, Xbox One | A puzzle game that "does something that you can't do with any other art form. This game has a clear message: 'Change your perspective', and unless you do so, you can not succeed. Every aspect (i.e. gameplay, design, puzzles) of The Witness is based upon this idea."[146] |
Inside | 2016 | Playdead | Xbox One, PC, PlayStation 4 | Playdead's follow-up to Limbo, Inside is a puzzle-platformer that follows an unnamed boy's trek across a surreal landscape while being chased by pursuers. It uses a wider array of cinematographic elements described by Christopher Byrd of The Washington Post: "It's a mood piece, a series of expertly framed environments that escalate in their strangeness."[147] |
Mafia III | 2016 | Hangar 13 | PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC, Mac OS X | The game is set in a re-imagined version of New Orleans in the 1960s and received praise for exploring controversial themes such as racism and segregation in the Southern United States.[148] |
The Last Guardian | 2016 | Japan Studio genDESIGN |
PlayStation 4 | The third Team Ico game, following Ico and Shadow of the Colossus, designed around a realistic-acting giant bird-cat-like creature that the player must learn to tend and care for in order to entice the creature to help solve puzzles.[131] |
Virginia | 2016 | Variable State | PC, Mac OS X, PlayStation 4, Xbox One | A first-person mystery thriller adventure game using a strong cinematographic language in the style of David Lynch films.[149] |
The Town of Light | 2016 | LKA | PC | A first-person 3D adventure about madness and ancient psychiatric asylum horrors.[150][151] |
Hyper Light Drifter | 2016 | Heart Machine | Xbox One, PlayStation 4, PC | An action role-playing game praised for its visual storytelling, hack-and-slash combat, emotional storyline, and anime-inspired 8-bit visuals.[152][153][154] |
Night in the Woods | 2017 | Infinite Fall Secret Lab 22nd Century Toys |
PC, Mac OS X, Linux, PlayStation 4, Xbox One | A single-player exploration game about an anthropomorphic cat named Mae, who dropped out of college and has returned to her slowly dying hometown to find that a lot has changed since she left. It has been praised for "a fantastic narrative with a beautiful art-style, theme and plenty of small touches occupying a wonderful world full of loving characters covering a sinister story underneath".[155] |
Nier: Automata | 2017 | PlatinumGames | PC, PlayStation 4, Xbox One | An action role-playing video game. Set in a post-apocalyptic Earth as the result of an alien invasion, the player controls android soldiers fighting AI controlled machines in the hope of reclaiming Earth. The game explores the philosophy of life and the philosophy of artificial intelligence, especially that if AI and machines can be considered as sentient beings.[156] |
The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild | 2017 | Nintendo EPD | Wii U, Nintendo Switch | A compelling entry in The Legend of Zelda franchise, which differs from other entries by creating a fully immersive, non-linear open-world experience with a realistic physics engine and an extremely precise attention to detail across an unprecedentedly vast world. Breath of the Wild received critical acclaim for its graphics and gameplay and has been hailed as not only a landmark title for the genre but as one of the greatest games of all time.[157] |
The Mooseman | 2017 | Morteshka | PC, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PlayStation Vita, iOS, Android | A game which reconstructs Komi mythology of the Finno-Ugric Komi peoples of northern Russia. It is made using scientific sources about Finno-Ugric beliefs and archeology.[158][159] |
What Remains of Edith Finch | 2017 | Giant Sparrow | PC, PlayStation 4, Xbox One | A first-person exploration game, the player explores the odd childhood home of Edith Finch and her family, while interacting with short vignettes that relate to the strange deaths of past Finch members. Indie studio Giant Sparrow conjured an adventure that blends exploration, reading, reality, and fantasy.[160] |
Hollow Knight | 2017 | Team Cherry | PC, Mac OS X, Linux, Nintendo Switch | A Metroidvania-style hack-and-slash platform game about an insect warrior trying save a kingdom from a terrible curse.[161][162][163] |
Last Day of June | 2017 | Ovosonico | PlayStation 4, PC | A 3D graphic adventure with a colorful cartoon aesthetic reminiscent of Tim Burton's films in stop-motion and a soundtrack composed by Steven Wilson. The story is about love and loss, life and death, and is like a puzzle.[164][165][166][167][168] |
Gorogoa | 2017 | Jason Roberts | PC, iOS, Nintendo Switch | A puzzle game presented with four images in a grid in which the player may arrange, combine, and explore each image to find a connection between them in order to advance the story. The creator who developed Gorogoa, Jason Roberts, drew all of the scenes by hand;[169] he cites David Roberts, Gustave Doré, Christopher Manson, and Chris Ware as influences to his art style.[170][171] |
The Invisible Hours | 2017 | Tequila Works | PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC | The Invisible Hours is an Agatha Christie-style murder mystery, a classic whodunit similar to And Then There Were None; it is also heavily inspired by Christopher Nolan's 2006 film The Prestige. Six people with an obscure past (among them inventor Thomas Edison) are invited by scientist Nikola Tesla to his mansion on an uninhabited and isolated little island. It was presented at NEXT during the 2017 Cannes Film Festival.[172][173][174][175][176] |
Kingdom Come: Deliverance | 2018 | Warhorse Studios | Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One | Set in the early 15th century, in the Kingdom of Bohemia, the game is noted for its focus on historical accuracy as well as both its attention to detail and realism in its gameplay.[177][178] |
11-11: Memories Retold | 2018 | DigixArt Aardman Animations |
PC, Xbox One, PlayStation 4 | A story-driven 3D adventure and interactive drama set during World War I, it is an antithesis to mainstream shooters, with an ambition to echo the centenary of World War I so that younger generations never forget. It was praised for its Van Gogh-like aesthetics, opening new expressive possibilities, and introducing technical innovations with great impact for the future of gaming.[179][180][181][182] |
Red Dead Redemption 2 | 2018 | Rockstar Studios | PlayStation 4, Xbox One | A large open-world game set in the late 19th-century American frontier, Red Dead Redemption 2 was noted for creating background settings, characters, wildlife, and other events that make the game immersive, while emphasizing the impact of the choices a player makes on how the player later interacts with these elements.[183] |
Return of the Obra Dinn | 2018 | 3909 LLC | PC, Mac OS X | The game is set aboard a fictional East India Company ghost ship in the early 1800s whose crew and passengers have all mysteriously died or disappeared, with the objective being to discover how. "A mystery that makes a grand and intricate game out of deduction."[184] |
Gris | 2018 | Nomada Studio | PC, Mac OS X, Nintendo Switch, iOS | A puzzle platformer that follows a girl named Gris, who wakes up in a crumbling world.[185] |
Manifold Garden | 2019 | William Chyr | PC, Mac OS X, Linux, OS | William Chyr was a sculpture artist with interest in architecture, and wanted to explore how he could take large-scale art into the virtual space of computer games.[186] |
Death Stranding | 2019 | Kojima Productions | PlayStation 4 | A video game by director Hideo Kojima, set in post-apocalyptic America, where a series of cataclysmic events caused the Death Stranding - the event where the souls of the dead come back from afterlife to the physical world. This, as well as a rainfall which accelerates passing of time caused people to become isolated. The protagonist Sam Bridges traverses America in order to connect the isolated outposts of survivors in order to rebuild America. Similarly to previous Hideo Kojima's productions, the game features a lot of symbolism and metaphors, as well as a commentary on real-world political issues, such as climate change and isolationism. The game was praised for its storytelling, soundtrack, graphics, Hollywood cast (including Norman Reedus, Mads Mikkelsen, Margaret Qualley, and Guillermo del Toro) as well as its unique approach to action-game genre.[187][188] |
Disco Elysium | 2019 | ZA/UM | PC, Mac OS X, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch | A sprawling isometric RPG about an amnesiac detective and his partner solving a murder in a war-torn city.[189] The game was listed as one of the top ten video games of the 2010s by TIME Magazine[190] and has been praised for its exploration of human nature and its political commentary. |
Untitled Goose Game | 2019 | House House | Microsoft Windows, macOS, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Xbox One | A puzzle stealth game in which players control a goose who bothers the inhabitants of an English village. The player must use the goose's abilities to manipulate objects and non-player characters to complete objectives. The game has won numerous awards including Game of the Year at the 23rd Annual D.I.C.E. Awards, and is being preserved by the ACMI, the Powerhouse Museum, and the Australian National Film and Sound Archive for posterity.[191] |
The Last of Us Part II | 2020 | Naughty Dog | PlayStation 4 | The sequel to Naughty Dog's The Last of Us, The Last of Us Part II is an action-adventure game set in a post-apocalyptic United States, the game focuses on two playable characters whose lives intertwine: Ellie, who sets out for revenge after suffering a tragedy, and Abby, a soldier who becomes involved in a conflict between her militia and a religious cult. The game holds the record for most Game of the Year awards[192] and was ranked among the best games of its generation by multiple outlets.[193][194][195] Like its predecessor the game has been lauded for its storytelling and its impact on video game narratives, with particular praise for its performances, diverse cast of characters and depictions of the cycle of violence, empathy, grief and anger. CNET's Jeff Bakalar went on to state that "It is undeniably an amazing work of art, a truly powerful storytelling experience that will absolutely stay with you".[196][197][198] |
Ghost of Tsushima | 2020 | Sucker Punch Productions | PlayStation 4 | The player controls Jin Sakai, a samurai on a quest to protect Tsushima Island during the first Mongol invasion of Japan and must choose between following the warrior code to fight honorably, or using practical but dishonorable methods of repelling the Mongols with minimal casualties. Writing for GamesRadar, Rachel Weber described the game's world as a "work of art",[199] Matt Miller from Game Informer described it as a "painter’s vision of feudal Japan",[200] and IGN's Mitchell Saltzman wrote that its visual landscape was one of the best ever for an open world game.[201] Critics particularly praised how the game used elements of nature like wind and birds to guide players to their objectives,[201][199][202]. Ghost of Tsushima is also considered as "a perfectly constructed work of art"[203] and one of the most beautiful game ever made.[204] The game received The Game Awards 2020's Best Art Direction Award, 24th Annual D.I.C.E. Awards's Outstanding Achievement in Art Direction, Visual Effects Society Awards's Outstanding Visual Effects in a Real-Time Project in 2021, and 21st Game Developers Choice Awards's Best Visual Art in 2021. |
Hades | 2020 | Supergiant Games | PC, Mac OS, Nintendo Switch | A roguelike action games based on the gods and figures of Greek mythology, in which Zagreus, the son of Hades, attempts to escape the Underworld. The game was listed as Game of the Year by Time,[205] the Washington Post,[206] and over 50 other publications.[207] Hades has been hailed as "a storytelling masterclass" and a revolution of the roguelike genre.[208] Abubakar Salim said of Hades when presenting it with the 2021 BAFTA Game Award for Artistic Achievement: "There are those who may dismiss games themselves as inconsequential parlor entertainment; exercises in frivolity that pale in comparison to film, television, and theatre; disposable chocolatines to be consumed and discarded into the waste bin of forgotten novelties. To those philistines we say with conviction: ...nah."[209] |
Before Your Eyes | 2021 | GoodbyeWorld Games | PC | An interactive story controlled entirely by the player's blinks. It requires the player to use a webcam to track eye movement and blinks in order to progress the story. Each scene can be skipped by immediately blinking or prolonged for as long the player can keep their eyes open, allowing them to see and hear more of the story around that particular scene. GameInformer's Marcus Stewart was "left reeling by the end" explaining that "You rarely get a lot of first-of-a-kind experiences in games anymore, and Before Your Eyes largely nails the execution"[210] |
See also[edit]
Notes[edit]
References[edit]
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ignored (help) - ↑ 4.0 4.1 "Top 10 Tuesday: Games as Art – IGN". Uk.games.ign.com. Archived from the original on 2009-12-16. Retrieved 2012-11-15. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Another World at the Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
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- ↑ Matulef, Jeffrey (8 July 2014). "Serious Sam dev Croteam details PS4 puzzler The Talos Principle". Eurogamer. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
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The artistry in games is another benefit Whittinghill sees in them. Whittinghill pointed to No Man’s Sky, To the Moon, INSIDE and the Talos Principle as examples of games as art. These games vary in both genre and style when compared to traditional big-budget games.
- ↑ Luis Aguasviva (2 November 2022). "Video games invade the art world in MoMA's Never Alone exhibition". Retrieved 25 January 2023.
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- ↑ "Hollow Knight". Metacritic.
- ↑ Marks, Tom (March 6, 2017). "Hollow Knight's charming art sets the bar for hand drawn games". PC Gamer.
- ↑ Walker, John (March 2, 2017). "Hollow Knight feels too familiar, despite being a solid metroidvania". Rock Paper Shotgun.
- ↑ "Last Day of June. Análisis para PS4 y PC". IGN España (in español). 2017-08-30. Retrieved 2017-09-09.
- ↑ "Last Day of June – La recensione". IGN Italia (in italiano). 2017-08-29. Retrieved 2017-09-09.
- ↑ "Análisis de Last Day of June, un cuento de amor y pérdida para PS4 y PC". HobbyConsolas (in español). Retrieved 2017-09-09.
- ↑ Hood, Vic (2017-08-31). "Last Day of June review". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2017-09-09.
- ↑ Newhouse, Alex (2017-08-29). "Last Day Of June Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 2017-09-09.
- ↑ Petitte, Omri (11 October 2012). "Gorogoa is a completely hand-drawn puzzler of Magritte-esque surrealism". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2018-06-10.
- ↑ Warr, Philippa (23 December 2013). "Gorogoa first look: a charming and beautiful illustrative puzzle game". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
- ↑ Graft, Kris (18 February 2014). "Road to the IGF: Jason Roberts' Gorogoa". Gamasutra. Retrieved 2018-06-10.
- ↑ "The Invisible Hours (PSVR) Review – GameCritics.com". gamecritics.com.
- ↑ Square, Push (October 12, 2017). "Review: The Invisible Hours (PS4)". Push Square.
- ↑ Yescombe, Rob (15 January 2018). "Game Design Deep Dive: Creating the 'spherical narrative' in The Invisible Hours". www.gamasutra.com.
- ↑ "NEXT" (PDF).
- ↑ "The Invisible Hours". May 28, 2018.
- ↑ Quinn, Austin (2019-04-11). "Kingdom Come: Deliverance Reminds Us Why Realism Matters". Exclusively Games. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
- ↑ Parkin, Jeffrey (2018-02-21). "How I learned to love Kingdom Come: Deliverance". Polygon. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
- ↑ "11–11: Memories Retold review: A splash of humanity to something as inhumane as war". The Independent. Retrieved 2018-11-18.
- ↑ "Game review: 11–11 Memories Retold is a moving First World War tribute". Metro. 2018-11-08. Retrieved 2018-11-18.
- ↑ "11–11: Memories Retold – Review". Video Games Art. 2018-11-17. Retrieved 2018-11-18.
- ↑ "11–11 Memories Retold Review | Trusted Reviews". Trusted Reviews. Retrieved 2018-11-18.
- ↑ Suderman, Peter (November 23, 2018). "Red Dead Redemption 2 Is True Art". The New York Times. Retrieved November 24, 2018.
- ↑ Cross, Katherine (November 8, 2018). "Opinion: Return of the Obra Dinn is a work of art". Gamasutra. Retrieved November 8, 2018.
- ↑ Blake, Vikki (January 10, 2019). "Gris review – an evocative, ethereal experience you don't want to miss". Eurogamer. Retrieved October 22, 2019.
- ↑ Smith, Ryan (August 10, 2016). "Video games level up to high art—and Chicago artist William Chyr is at the controls". Chicago Reader. Retrieved October 20, 2019.
- ↑ Webster, Andrew (2019-11-01). "Death Stranding is a long, bizarre journey that's both breathtaking and boring". The Verge. Retrieved 2020-08-03.
- ↑ Dawkins, Dan (2019-11-01). "Death Stranding review – Hideo Kojima's radically tough slow-burning epic". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2020-08-03.
- ↑ "Disco Elysium: The Kotaku Review". Kotaku. 8 November 2019. Retrieved 2020-10-15.
- ↑ "The 10 Best Video Games of the 2010s". Time. Retrieved 2020-10-15.
- ↑ "Museums acquire viral Australian video game Untitled Goose Game". amp.theage.com.au. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
- ↑ "The Last of Us Part 2 has more game of the year awards than The Witcher 3, the previous record holder". VG247. 2021-01-26. Retrieved 2021-05-27.
- ↑ Juba, Joe. "Game Informer's Best Games Of The Generation". Game Informer. Retrieved 2021-05-27.
- ↑ December 2020, GamesRadar Staff 15 (15 December 2020). "GamesRadar's 100 best games of the generation". gamesradar. Retrieved 2021-05-27.
- ↑ The Best Games of the PS4/Xbox One Generation - IGN, 31 December 2020, retrieved 2021-05-27
- ↑ The Last of Us 2 is a brilliant work of art: Review (spoiler-free), retrieved 2021-05-27
- ↑ Dougherty, Conor (2020-06-19). "'The Last of Us Part II' Is a Dark Game for a Dark Time". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-05-27.
- ↑ "The Last of Us Part 2 | Games of the Year 2020". GamesIndustry.biz. 22 December 2020. Retrieved 2021-05-27.
- ↑ 199.0 199.1 Weber, Rachel (July 14, 2020). "Ghost of Tsushima review: "A worthy swan song for the PS4"". GamesRadar. Archived from the original on November 16, 2021. Retrieved July 24, 2022. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Miller, Matt (July 17, 2020). "Ghost of Tsushima Review – A Most Honorable Epic". Game Informer. Archived from the original on July 1, 2021. Retrieved July 24, 2022. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ 201.0 201.1 Saltzman, Mitchell (July 14, 2022). "Ghost of Tsushima Review". IGN. Archived from the original on November 16, 2021. Retrieved July 14, 2020. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Tran, Edmond (July 17, 2020). "Ghost Of Tsushima Review - You Khan Do It". GameSpot. Archived from the original on January 2, 2022. Retrieved July 24, 2022. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Hellyar, Jayden (14 August 2020). "Ghost of Tsushima: A Perfectly Constructed Work of Art – PS4 Review". Gamecrater. Retrieved 19 November 2022.
- ↑ Tassi, Paul. "Is PS4's 'Ghost Of Tsushima' The Most Beautiful Game Ever Made?". Forbes. Retrieved 19 November 2022.
- ↑ "The 10 Best Video Games of 2020". Time. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
- ↑ "The best games of 2020". Washington Post. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
- ↑ "2020 - Game of the Year Tracker". Game Awards.net. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
- ↑ "Hades is a storytelling masterclass with ample lessons for other games". Washington Post. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
- ↑ "2021 BAFTA Games Awards". Youtube. Retrieved 2021-03-27.
- ↑ Stewart, Marcus (April 20, 2021). "Before Your Eyes Review - An Emotional, Eye-Opening Experience". Game Informer. Archived from the original on 2021-04-23. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help)
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