Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116170
05/07/04 05:03 PM
05/07/04 05:03 PM
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Joined: Feb 2000
Posts: 26,918 Stony Brook, New York, USA
Becky
The Medieval Lady
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The Medieval Lady
Sonic Boomer
Joined: Feb 2000
Posts: 26,918
Stony Brook, New York, USA
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I think a lot of adventure games qualify. I'd add Syberia, The Longest Journey, the Broken Sword games, Shadow of Destiny, and Ring. As soon as I post this, I'll think of ten more!
Edit: Hitchcock: The Final Cut, Zork Nemesis, The Last Express, Grim Fandango, Titanic: An Adventure Out of Time.
Question: Are the Myst games "games for adults"? Or don't they contain enough character development to qualify?
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116172
05/07/04 09:09 PM
05/07/04 09:09 PM
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Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 11,903 The Garden State
LadyKestrel
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Adept Boomer
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The Garden State
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Obsidian, Golden Gate, and The Castle come to mind as games for grownups.
Wake me when it's spring.
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116173
05/08/04 12:00 AM
05/08/04 12:00 AM
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Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 1,522 Indiana
Bryansmom
Addicted Boomer
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Addicted Boomer
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Indiana
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Phantasmagoria I and II are definitely on the list, although they may have been classified as adult games on the box. I seem to remember Phantasmagoria's box had a warning on it?
What lies behind you and what lies before you are tiny matters compared to what lies within you. --Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116177
05/09/04 03:09 PM
05/09/04 03:09 PM
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Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 5,041 Bay Area, CA
Melanie1
BAAG Specialist
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BAAG Specialist
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 5,041
Bay Area, CA
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I think Post Mortem & Dark Fall should be added to the list.
Weekend in Capri also seems like more of an adult game to me.
Melanie
"The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated." Mahatma Gandhi
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116178
05/09/04 07:47 PM
05/09/04 07:47 PM
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Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 1,522 Indiana
Bryansmom
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Indiana
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I don't want to upset anyone with my opinion, but I don't think Syberia should be there. I don't think I would have a problem with my 11-year-old son playing it. I also don't see anything about Dark Fall that would be adult in nature, other than the fact that it is scary. However, the scares are not graphic in nature, so I guess it would depend on the age of the child. Happy gaming, Beth
What lies behind you and what lies before you are tiny matters compared to what lies within you. --Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116180
05/09/04 08:36 PM
05/09/04 08:36 PM
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Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 1,800 Ardsley, New York
Llewton
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There is nothing on that list I would consider to be an adult game.I see nothing wrong with the Broken Sword and Gabriel Knight games.I played them with my niece when she was 10-12 years old. In fact I have no problem with kids playing any of the games listed above (10 years and above) other than the 2 phantasmagorias (played Phantasmagoria with her when she was 13). Most kids I know (some 10 and all 12 and above love horror plots and as long as they aren't loded with nudity and/or sex I see nothing wrong with them playing them. Many kids 10 and up I know to have loved the Indiana Jones pictures so I see no problem with Black Dahlia (it's practically theIndiana jones formula, chasing Nazis encounter the occult).Going along with this I also see nothing wrong with Zork Nemesis. I would add Blue Heat and Midnight Nowhere, which I would consider true adult games, to the list.
If Jenny's criteria is the only guide than i'd go along with all on the list as far as being enjoyable for adults as well as kids. In this aspect why aren't all the Tex Murphy games on the list? I stand by what I said before though if you want to use and adults only, not for kids criteria.
Happy gaming all, Bill
If the world didn't suck would we all fall off Now playing Post Mortem, Midnight Nowhere and Still Life
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116182
05/10/04 08:53 AM
05/10/04 08:53 AM
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Joined: Feb 2000
Posts: 26,918 Stony Brook, New York, USA
Becky
The Medieval Lady
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The Medieval Lady
Sonic Boomer
Joined: Feb 2000
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Stony Brook, New York, USA
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Hey Jenny100 -- as for Syberia, if a game can inspire this , I'd say it's the kind of game that makes you think. P.S. -- The Last Express and Grim Fandango didn't make your final list. Although Grim Fandango IS somewhat borderline in terms of your definition, I think The Last Express clearly qualifies.
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116186
09/16/04 08:43 PM
09/16/04 08:43 PM
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Joined: Nov 1999
Posts: 10,323
gatorlaw
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I am not so sure I would list them so much as adult games as games for those with a certain level of abilities and/or experience.
Many of those games my eldest son played solo and beat Myst solo,(his first MAC adventure game) without any hints/help or aid in a weeks time. He was 11 when he beat the game. I wasn't playing as Myst didn't interest me that much then.
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116187
09/16/04 09:17 PM
09/16/04 09:17 PM
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Joined: Mar 2002
Posts: 1,565 Pennsylvania, USA (left my bel...
mszv
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So, it's not that you didn't pick good games, but I'm still unsure what you mean by "adult" exactly. They games you mentioned have some story to them, and some complexity, but I would not call most of them more adult then some of the good children's, or more appropriately young adult literature out there. I consider most of the games on your list to be in the vein of decent genre literature. Are you talking about a story driven game?
Oh, I'm not complaining about the stories, mostly, except that for most games, adults do not seem to have adult relationships. I guess that's OK, given that it's genre stuff, and it telling an adventure story, but most adventure games seem to put the protagonist in the equivalent of a cloister, at least for the duration of the game.
Grim Fandango is interesting. I'm not sure of the rating, but it's got some similarities to Finding Nemo. In Finding Nemo (very, very, very G rated!) there were some jokes and themes that could only be understood by adults.
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116188
09/16/04 10:10 PM
09/16/04 10:10 PM
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Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 11,903 The Garden State
LadyKestrel
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The Garden State
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In Finding Nemo (very, very, very G rated!) there were some jokes and themes that could only be understood by adults.
That was true of many of the cartoons we used to watch as kids. They were funny on several levels. 
Wake me when it's spring.
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116189
09/16/04 10:37 PM
09/16/04 10:37 PM
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Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 548 West Wales.UK
Cilla
Settled Boomer
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Settled Boomer
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West Wales.UK
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I would definitely put In Memoriam/Missing on the list. The whole premise of the game -the internet links- and the video clips are far too realistic. EDIT And the E-Mails
Of course, you need a child nearby you can call on to do the arcade puzzles (well I did, anyway)
-------------------------------------------------
All the world's a stage,and all the men and women merely players
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116190
09/16/04 11:13 PM
09/16/04 11:13 PM
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 40,644 southeast USA
Jenny100
OP
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OP
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southeast USA
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I'd forgotten all about this thread. Originally posted by gatorlaw: I am not so sure I would list them so much as adult games as games for those with a certain level of abilities and/or experience.
That's another way of saying it. Many of those games my eldest son played solo and beat Myst solo,(his first MAC adventure game) without any hints/help or aid in a weeks time. He was 11 when he beat the game. I wasn't playing as Myst didn't interest me that much then.
I don't think games like Myst were what I was originally thinking of when I posted this thread (though after all this time I can't be sure what I was thinking of). After all, even if a 6 year old is too young to solve the puzzles, he can still watch while his grandmother does it. The story is not something he couldn't understand. And there are all those pretty pictures.
I think I was thinking of something more along these lines - games with a mature theme, which aren't just "dirty" for the sake of being dirty - i.e. not full of profanity or sex or naked people just for the sake of trying to shock people or raise ratings or whatever. These things may or may not be present in the game, but if they're there, it isn't gratuitous.
It's late and I don't know if I'm making sense. Like I said, I'd forgotten all about this thread and my original reason for making it kind of got lost in people naming any game that adults could enjoy and not necessarily those with mature themes that aren't "dirty for dirty's sake." (Maybe there's a less pejorative word than "dirty" that I could use, but it's late and I'm too lazy to drag out the thesaurus).
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Re: Games designed to be played by adults, not "adult games"
#116191
09/16/04 11:56 PM
09/16/04 11:56 PM
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 40,644 southeast USA
Jenny100
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OP
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southeast USA
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Originally posted by mszv: So, it's not that you didn't pick good games, but I'm still unsure what you mean by "adult" exactly. I don't blame you. I think what happened here (4 months ago) is I had this idea in my head of what I was looking for, and tried to explain it but didn't do a very good job. People misunderstood and listed games that could be enjoyed by adults, but not specifically those with mature themes or themes that a child probably wouldn't "get." I decided to go with the flow rather than saying, "No that's not what I mean" to a bunch of people. And that ended up confusing you (and others too, no doubt). I think the list would really end up looking more like this (though some of these are borderline and I haven't played some others so have put question marks by them) Amber: Journeys Beyond Amerzone Black Dahlia Black Mirror Blackstone Chronicles The Castle (?) The Dagger of Amon Ra (Laura Bow) (?) The Dark Eye Dark Fall Faust Gabriel Knight 1, 2, and 3 Golden Gate Grim Fandango The Last Express The Longest Journey Morpheus Phantasmagoria 2 (?) Post Mortem Ring Salammbo Sanitarium Shadow of Destiny (?) Syberia Tex Murphy Titanic: Adventure out of Time Zork Nemesis A lot of these are horror games, but the idea is that it's more psychological horror than blood and guts. Important is that the characters have some depth. And there are "dark" themes in the game - not necessarily evil and corruption, but death, aging, madness, sickness, loneliness, isolation, that sort of thing.
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