The
Best 10 Games For Playstation Four
( 4 )
You're heading to the store to get a PS4 right now,
and need to know which games to get. (Keep your eyes on the road, please!) Or
you're home, all set up, realizing you want more stuff to play. Or maybe you're
suiting up for a battle in the console war, applying your facepaint and trying
to remember which games will best help you make the argument for Sony's new
console. We are here to help.P
As with most new consoles, the selection of games on
PS4 is a bit limited. The selection of good games? Even more so. Below, find a
list of the games we recommend for Sony's machine. We will, of course, be
updating this list regularly as more games are released for the PS4. We
eventually cap these lists at 12 games, adding and subtracting as need be. For
now...
Assassin’s
Creed 4 Black Flag
After years of changes both minor and major, the
Assassin's Creed series had begun to feel in a rut. Finally this year, with the
pirate-themed Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag, the series has taken a major and
unequivocal step forward. It doesn't lose all of the series' bad habits—hello,
follow missions—but it improves many longstanding problems with better stealth,
easier-to-navigate cities, and sidequests that actually feel like they help
make your character more powerful. Best of all, it adds naval combat and a vast
Caribbean overworld that make the game feel like, in the words of Luke Plunkett,
"Wind Waker for grown-ups."
The next-gen versions of the game look incredibly
good, particularly the PS4 version, which runs in beautiful 1080p resolution.
Add on the excellent single-player expansion Freedom Cry and Assassin's Creed
IV becomes a cinch to recommend, and easily one of the very best games on
PlayStation 4.
A Good Match For: Pirate fans; history buffs; anyone
who's ever wanted to pull up alongside a British frigate, grab a rope and swing
from one deck to the other before fighting their way up the deck to take on the
captain. Basically, anyone who's ever wanted to be a pirate.
Not a Good Match For: Those who demand precision
controls. The on-foot controls in Black Flag are probably the best of the
series, but they're still a far cry from where a third-person
stealth/platformer should be. It's time for a crouch button, Ubisoft.
Read our review.
Watch it in action.
Study our tips for the game.
Purchase From: Amazon
| Wal-Mart | Best Buy | Gamestop
Injustice
: Gods Among Us
We've seen superhero fighting games before, but
nothing nearly as ambitious as Injustice: Gods Among Us. Where other games
fumble for clumsy excuses as to why Superman and Batman find themselves at
odds, Injustice features an extensive, multi-character, alternate reality story
mode supported by a 12-issue comic book series. The planet shakes as iconic DC
Comics powerhouses do battle, all using a balanced fighting system crafted by
the studio responsible for Mortal Kombat 9. With an extensive challenge mode,
numerous arcade-style battles and an extensive online multiplayer mode, getting
100% completion in Injustice is a Herculean task. The PlayStation 4 gets the
Ultimate Edition of the game, packed with all of the game's downloadable
content. The graphics might not be "next-gen", but there's so much
satisfying content packed into Injustice: Gods Among Us the visuals hardly
matter.
A Good Match For: Fighting game fans (it's currently
the only fighting game on the PlayStation 4), comic book geeks, and every
combination of the two.
Not a Good Match For: Pacifists, Superman purists.
Read our review.
Watch it in action.
Purchase
From: Amazon | Wal-Mart | Best Buy | Gamestop
Lego
Marvel Super Heroes
We were expecting LEGO Marvel Super Heroes to be a
lot of fun; the LEGO games' brand of chaotic action and meta-humor seemed a
good fit for the sprawling Marvel universe. What we weren't expecting was a
game this massive in scope, this ambitious, and this impressive. Not only does
Super Heroes let you swing through an open-world Manhattan as Spider-Man or
tear through the air as Iron Man, the game's hub is on the SHIELD Helicarrier,
and you can play as Squirrel Girl. Super Heroes provides the freedom of a Grand
Theft Auto with the characters of Marvel comics, with a seemingly endless
supply of in-jokes and references for true believers.
A Good Match For: Comics fans, people who liked the
Avengers movie, anyone who's ever wanted to fly around New York City as Iron
Man, LEGO enthusiasts.
Not a Good Match For: Fans of Superman, Batman and
Wonder Woman, people who hate The Avengers, and those who want precision controls,
particularly in the air.
Read our review.
Watch it in action.
Purchase
From: Amazon | Wal-Mart | Best Buy | Gamestop
Need For
Speed : Rivals
Need for Speed: Rivals takes the trademark
speed-obsessed arcade racing of the Need for Speed series and dials up the
jerk-o-meter, casting players as either a street-racer or a cop out to ruin one
another's fun. It's one of the most gorgeous next-gen games out there, offering
solid performance and beautiful 1080p graphics, sure. But the real draw is the
gameplay, that trademark sense of speed that'll have you whooping and
fist-pumping as you pull off impossible jumps and daring escapes. Easily one of
the most flat-out enjoyable next-gen games available, and a great showcase for
new gaming hardware.
A Good Match For: Speed freaks, jerks, people who
like ramping a car off of a cliff while pop music plays, anarchists.
Not a Good Match For: Anybody who wants a game with
characters they care about. Everyone in Rivals is a jerk, and the dialogue is
just so, so awful.
Read our review.
Watch it in action.
Purchase
From: Amazon | Wal-Mart | Best Buy | Gamestop
Strider
Strider isn't really one for ceremony: You're thrown
into the action with essentially no narrative BS or tutorial, nothing like
that. You're a guy with a sword, your job is to wreck all the cyber-soldiers
and other various bad guys in your way. Then again, do you really need any more
story than that? Not really, not when the game is as fundamentally enjoyable as
Strider—which really just feels right. It plays like a particularly groovy
memory of the classic NES version, a sort of Ninja Gaiden meets Super Metroid
thing that, well, is about as cool as that description sounds.
A Good Match For: Fans of ninjas, fans of robots,
fans of Strider.
Not a Good Match For: Those looking for something
casual to pick up and play; Strider is never unfairly punishing, but it can be
a difficult game.
Watch our impressions of the game.
Purchase
From: Available digitally from the PlayStation Store
Outlast
Purc Nightmare fans rejoice: Your game is here.
Outlast is a nasty, often terrifying piece of work, a game that'll have you
leaping back on the couch, crying out in fear and clutching the controller with
every muscle in your body tensed. Its story, setting, characters… none of those
things matter all that much, not when your character is hidden under a bed,
peering through your camera's blurry infrared lens, hoping that the deadly
psychotic who's been following you won't look down. Previously only available
for the PC, Outlast has made the hop to PS4 without breaking a sweat, and while
it's not the prettiest game on the system, it was never all that concerned with
looks to begin with. Bonus: There may be no better game with which to take
advantage of the PS4's streaming capabilities—the only thing more fun than
fearfully shouting and cursing in your living room is inviting the world to
watch you do it.
A Good Match For: Horror buffs, people who like
having the shit scared out of them, anyone who hears that this game has a
button for looking over your shoulder at whatever's chasing you and thinks
"That sounds like the game for me!"
Not a Good Match For: The faint of heart. If you
can't take some jump-scares and gore, Outlast will probably be a bit much for
you.
Watch it in action.
Purchase
From: Available digitally from the PlayStation Store.
Tomb
Raider : Definitive Edition
Everyone likes Die Hard, right? What if instead of a
dangerous skyscraper with a Japanese name, that movie had taken place on a
dangerous island with a Japanese name? What if instead of John McClane with no
shoes, it had starred Lara Croft with no sleeves? "Now I have a bow and
arrow… ho ho ho." And so we have Tomb Raider, an action-minded reboot that
forcefully injects new life into the beleaguered Tomb Raider franchise. The
"definitive" next-gen version of the game is just that, a
better-looking version of last year's already good-looking game.P
A Good Match For: Bow-hunting enthusiasts,
wolf-haters, anyone who wants a game that'll show off the graphical prowess of
their new next-gen console.
Not a Good Match For: The squeamish, wolf-lovers,
those who have already played the 2013 game. The Definitive Edition is lovely
looking, but it doesn't add any new gameplay or feel all that different from
the game that came out last year.
Read our review of the original and our thoughts on
the Definitive Edition.
Watch it in action.
Purchase
From: Amazon | Wal-Mart | Best Buy | Gamestop
Don’t
Starve
Sometimes a name says it all. In the case of Don't
Starve, the name says most of it, though it really could've been called Don't
Die. Or maybe even Have Fun Dying! The game, which tells the story of one man
(or woman)'s fight to survive a deadly, Edward Gorey-influenced fantasy world,
is often brutally difficult. You may not always starve, but you will most
certainly perish, and you'll perish a lot. But therein lies Don't Starve's
appeal—like Minecraft before it, the game allows players to explore and
gradually master the various interlocking ecosystems of a complicated and
mysterious world. All of the smart and addictive design of the PC version is
present in the PS4 version, and the controls translate well to a controller.
A Good Match For: People who like deep,
uncompromising games; masochists, survivalists, anyone who wishes people's
voices sounded like weird brass instruments.
Not a Good Match For: Anyone looking for a game they
can easily sit down and have fun with. Don't Starve is a punishing experience
that only opens up after hours of play, and the steep initial difficulty curve
can be off-putting.
Watch it in action.
Purchase
From: Available digitally from the PlayStation Store.
Rayman
Legends
Who needs arms and legs to be the star of a brilliant
platformer? Not Rayman. The second game in the resurrected cartoon action
franchise still sports an incredibly lush art style but also shows off sharp
ideas and a ton of variety. It makes the leap to next-gen consoles in
predictably fine fashion, with an absurd amount of slappy, goofy game to go
around.
A Good Match for: Co-op fanatics. Legends is a very
good game for solo play but it's great for folks to team up and take on.
Not a Good Match for: Those wanting
turn-your-brain-off platforming. Rayman Legends' occasionally challenging
difficulty requires quick reflexes. For the most part, there's no coasting
here.
Read our review.
Watch it in action.
Purchase
From: Amazon | Wal-Mart | Best Buy | Gamestop
Doki-Doki
Universe
Doki Doki Universe is a game a robot who has to learn
what it means to be human. It is also an interactive personality test. It's not
a very challenging game. It mostly involves chatting with odd characters in
weird worlds, conjuring gifts for characters from an expanding inventory of
buildings, bands and other stuff ("poop" might be one of those other
stuffs). There is also a cute messaging program that you can use to communicate
with the game's characters and real people, but the weirdest of all might be
the asteroids you can fly to to answer questions about such identity-revealing
quandaries as whether you would side with the utensils or the dessert.P
Given that you can experience a sampling of that for
free on any PS4, there's no good reason not to try it. Given that the game,
such as it is a game, is funny, refreshing and a good palette cleanser to
access on the harddrive between playing bigger PS4 games, it's easily one of
the PS4's early Bests.P
A Good Match For: People who are interested in an
adventure in which you can fly on a chunk of cheese and talk to a toilet.P
Not a Good Match For: Those who want a traditional
video game, since some won't define this Animal Crossing-like experience as a
game at all.P
Read our thoughts and watch a video of us playing.
Purchase From: Available digitally from the PlayStation Store.
By : @aqmal_f17
From survey : AmericanGamers.Org
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