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Games that respect your time.

When I was kid, I could sit in front of TV for hours and sink a day or two away into a game and have no problem having to start the game over from the beginning. Time meant nothing to me and I wasted it like it was a near infinite resource.

Now I am a parent and ain't got time for some of the nonsense that's in games nowadays. I'm lucky if I have even an hour to play each night.

A good example: Forza Horizon 5 allows you to switch cars mid game without traveling back to a house. That to me is a huge time saver compared to the recent NFS games.

Contrarily, Forza Motorsport (2023) makes you do qualifications every round. While realistic, a big time sink.

That said, what are some of your favorite games that have respect for your limited time?

43 comments
  • Rocket League. Games are quick, you can play one or many in a session. I don’t know if epic has ruined it yet, but last I played the good old core game was still there.

    • This one is misleading though. It's a bit like, "Who would ever want a second hit of meth!? Just try it this once! Only takes 5 minutes!"

  • Armored Core 6. Missions are pretty short, attempts on them can be abandoned without losing anything but your progress in that attempt, and there is absolutely no slack time--start to end it's densely packed with new content.

  • i think bethesda games do it well but you gotta make sure you dont stop playing in the middle of a dungeon because then you will forget what the hell you were doing. but going at it like 1 dungeon or quest at a time is rather nice, its how ive played it for the last couple years

  • Dirt Rally (1 not 2. Fuck you EA) Noita Gunfire Reborn Doorkickers Brigador Super Hexagon Dungeon Warfare Cultist Simulator Creeper World Post Void Devil Daggers

  • I realized I only have the patience for (relatively) short singleplayer games (I just hate grinding in general in video games).

    Some of my favorites are:
    NieR:Automata (around 40-60 hours of playtime. This one might seem ironic, as it does have some repetition, but it has no grinding and always something interesting new. It also has by far the best story of any game I've ever played)

    The Beginners Guide (4 hours of gameplay. It is super unique and has a cool take on psychology, which I haven't seen in any other game or movie. But you need to play it all the way to the end for it to make sense)

    Noita (hard rouge like, and the only one I really enjoy. It's also very unique in its genre and you can always save and quit.)

    Balatro (technically also a rouge lite, but with playing poker hands. It has short rounds and is a casual game, if you only have a few minutes ans don't know what to play)

    • Nier Automata isn't my favorite story. I'm still confused about some parts of it. But it's one of the most intriguing stories I've ever played.

      The gameplay and understated humor are some of my favorite though. The combat is the absolute perfect mix of complexity to stay interesting and yet simple enough to not be overwhelming. And the chip upgrade system is one of my favorite upgrade systems.

    • Balatro also has a game speed setting that greatly shortens the animations. The game basically moves as fast as you can click.

  • That really depends on what you're looking for. In general, I find shorter games to respect my time more. So here's my process:

    1. collect some recommendations (here, reddit, game reviewers, etc)
    2. look up time to beat on How Long to Beat, and add to wishlist if it seems reasonable (e.g. <10 hours for a puzzle game or platformer, 10-20 for an action/story game, etc)
    3. buy games when I run out based on reviews on the games in my wishlist

    Some examples:

    • Little Nightmares, INSIDE, Darq, and A Juggler's Tale - 2D puzzle-platformers at <5 hours each
    • Ori and the Blind Forest, Blue Fire, and Headlander - metroidvanias at 5-10 hours
    • Manifold Garden, Return of the Obra Dinn, Portal/Portal 2 - puzzle games a- 5-10 hours

    Some longer games are also great, and I mostly look for lack of grinding, ability to save whenever, and praise for the story, such as:

    • Yakuza series - can play in 5-10 min increments, but reserve an hour for boss fights (super long and high quality cutscenes)
    • Ys series - older games are short (1&2), later games are longer, and saves aren't super frequent (about 15-20 min between save points), but I think the gameplay and story are worthwhile; favorites are Ys 1 (really old), Ys Origin (11-ish hours per play-through, 3 play throughs needed, but each is satisfying); grinding is quite rare for a JRPG

    I find that the more I avoid the super popular AAA games, the happier I am with my limited playtime.

  • I don't play Hitman in short bursts, but I think you certainly could. The sandbox is there for you to figure out and mess around in. As long as you get your target killed and get out, it doesn't matter if you did it quick, slow, in a clown suit, or just happen to kill every other non-target NPC in the map either.

43 comments