![]() ![]() The cult Yakuza series has long threatened to boil over into the mainstream, and this turn-based transition with a brand-new protagonist is as perfect a time as any to get involved.Ĭombining the sublime and the ridiculous, Like a Dragon continues Yakuza’s meticulous recreation of the backstreets and red-light districts of Japan - this time focusing on Yokohama - while taking the series’ trademark wacky humour to the next level to incorporate tropes you’d see in more typical and fantasy turn-based RPGs.ĭebuff enemies with demoralising insults, breathe fire with cheap booze and a lighter, or swing a handbag like a makeshift flail to split some skulls. Plus, there's the tantalizing prospect of the eventual Elder Scrolls 6 on the horizon as well.įor the sake of space, yes these all count as one on the list. ![]() Of these, Fallout 1 and 2 come highly recommended if you’re interested in exploring the franchise lore - but be aware, they are very unforgiving by modern standards. On PC, you also get access to some of the pre-Bethesda entries into series they later acquired. Oh, and let's not forget brand-new IP Starfield, which has you exploring the vast expanse of space.Īnd that’s to say nothing of the more shooter-focussed side of things - DOOM and Wolfenstein are also both excellent - as well as the underrated sci-fi immersive-sim, Prey, which has one of the best opening sequences around. Whether it’s the high fantasy world of Morrowind, Oblivion and Skyrim, the quirky post-nuclear wasteland of Fallout, or the whale-oil-punk Victoriandustrial cityscapes of Dishonored, pretty much everything on offer from Bethesda absolutely rules. If you’ve never played them, then I’ll let you into something of an open secret: Bethesda RPGs are a little bit good. Oblivion, Skyrim, Fallout, Starfield and every other Bethesda game
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