Play it on: PC
Current goal: Lose more sleep to this incredible collection
Every year, one or two games come along that I don’t just enjoy or love, but feel reinvigorated by. These are those rare, special games so bursting with creativity and vision that they help reignite my appreciation for video games more broadly. In short, they are the games that remind me why I love games in the first place. Last year, it was primarily Tears of the Kingdom and Alan Wake 2. This year, UFO 50 seems poised to be the game that does this more than any other.
In the shortest and simplest sense, UFO 50 is a compilation of 50 new retro games, and that, in and of itself, might be enough to make UFO 50 great, a remarkable value, a great bang-for-your-buck proposition. But it really is so much more than that, and my appreciation for this aspect only continues to deepen as I play it. UFO 50 really does feel like a window into a pocket dimension in which developer UFO Soft actually existed, and the more I play these games, the more I feel my appreciation for games as an art form being stimulated and enriched. These games are in conversation with each other and with the medium more broadly. They feel like the work of people who were pushing the limits of a burgeoning art form, and who had strange and wonderful ideas about what to do with it. This is a rich, insightful, and extremely fun celebration of one of the most exciting eras in game development history, by some of the designers who are most enthusiastically carrying on that spirit of risk and innovation today.—Carolyn Petit
(P.S. If you’re not quite sold on UFO 50 yet and want to see someone else enjoy discovering some of its wonders first, I highly recommend the recent streams of it by Macaw45 which, as of this writing anyway, you can find here.)