After a long, long, long day, you walk back through your front door and turn on your console (or PC). Once it loads up a game can be selected, so you choose Forza Horizon 4. In a minute or two, you’ve transported to another world where today’s stress disappears to be filled with the revving of a V8 as you blast down the drag strip. Speeds hit 200MPH as you completely crush your old record.
Video games have been a popular source of entertainment for all ages, but there is more than one type of video game, and they’re not all about destroying things. Not only are there more than one type, but there are good attributes like meeting and hanging out with many people from around the globe or relieving stress from a long day.
What I call peaceful video games are the games where there is some to no violence. Most of these games are rated “E” or “E10+”(“E” means that anyone can play it, and “E10+” means that everyone ten or older can play it). These are games like Minecraft, Stardew Valley, and most Nintendo games like Super Mario. These games don’t have a lot of violence, and if they do it’s very cartoony. There are also games that have no violence at all, like racing games like Forza. Many games that are in this category have you as the player trying to reach a good goal like getting a trophy or winning a race. Some like Stardew Valley have goals but never a final one, so always they have more to complete. In the end, these games are overall great and very calming, unlike our next category.
Horror games are not quite as popular to play but are still very well known. Five Nights At Freddy’s is one of the more popular horror games, but there are many more. Many of them have jumpscares or chases down hallways and try to immerse the player into the game. Little Nightmares may not have the jumpscares, but it has the theme down perfectly with creepy hallways and dark, damp forests. The art design in Little Nightmares improves the overall experience with a dark theme but not super realistic. Horror games are definitely something not to be played at night for their nightmarish designs, but the next type has people playing at any time in the day or night.
Role-playing games, or RPGs, are games with long stories, open worlds, and massive freeroam. These are some of the most well-known games, like The Legend of Zelda, Red Dead Redemption 2 online, Fallout, Skyrim, and Dark Souls. Some RPGs also fall into the horror category, but not all of them do. The Legend of Zelda series is a very, very, very popular RPG from Nintendo. 27 different Zelda games have been made since its first release in 1986. They’ve only gotten better with Breath of the Wild (BOTW) getting almost 200 GOTY (Game of the Year) awards. Known for its beautiful art style, graphics and gameplay, overall BOTW is one of the most popular RPGs out there. Fallout and Skyrim, The Duo RPGs from Bethesda, are also both very well rated with Skyrim getting over two dozen GOTY awards but with Fallout 4 not winning any.
The second to last main type of video game that fits into many of the games already listed is FPS, or First Person Shooters. FPS are some of the most popular games on all devices. DOOM, Call of Duty, Battlefield, Apex Legends, and many more. But none of these games would be around without the original FPS’s. GoldenEye 007 was one of the first FPS games that started the battle of battle games, and along with the original DOOM, these two games were the building blocks for most FPS games today. With these FPS games, though, they all share the heat of the battle, the destruction of battlefields, and the exploding of explosives. Most of these games are rated T for Teen or M for Mature(18+), and for good reason because of the themes of these games. Most of the time FPS games are based on real wars and are meant to look realistic. This means that the horrors of a battlefield can be experienced without any actual death but is still rated “T” or “M” for blood, gore, violence, and any other violent attribute.
The action and adventure category already fits into many of the games already listed. Red Dead Redemption 1 and 2, Dark Souls, Legend of Zelda, and any other video game that has you as the player explore, discover, and fight (sometimes not fight). In Red Dead Redemption 1 it has you hunting down your formal gang members in the dying wild west as the era of the modern world really begins, with missions spanning across the entire open-world and free-roam map (open world means that you can do whatever you want or do the story missions the game gives you, and Free-roam means that you can go anywhere on the map without having to unlock anything). Read Dead also has a very long story with a bunch of side quests to prevail and a world-spanning across part of Mexico and the Southwestern United States to explore (by the way, what I’m calling a “story” is a set of missions that lead you through a plot).
Now as you exit out of Forza Horizon 4 after finishing a couple of races, and maybe head off and do something else, or try to play a different game, maybe try an FPS like DOOM, or chill off with a game like Stardew Valley. Possibly you could gain some adrenaline with a Horror game like FNAF. So with endless types and possibilities of Video Games out there, there really is something for everyone.
-Walker J.