• Sun. Sep 22nd, 2024

The games you forgot released in 2021

Byadmin

Dec 28, 2021


As we storm through the final days of 2021, surrounded by big releases like Halo: Infinite and Battlefield 2042, plus major updates like Call of Duty: Warzone Pacific, it’s not a bad time to take a look back at the massive flood of games that came earlier in the year. A moment’s thought brings to mind the huge successes of 2021, like Valheim, Hitman 3, Forza Horizon 5, Chivalry 2, Back for Blood, and Deathloop, and plenty more. 

Despite the many game delays of 2021 (creating what feels like an overstuffed 2022 on the horizon), it was a pretty great year for games. But there’s only so much room in our organic RAM to remember everything that came out this year. Here’s a look back at a few games that launched in 2021 you may have forgotten about.

The Medium – January 28

(Image credit: Bloober Team)

Lady Dimitrescu towered over the horror genre this year, and not just because she’s over 9 feet tall: Resident Evil Village isn’t just a great horror game but one of the best games of the year. But don’t sleep on The Medium just because it came out way back in January. The stealth horror/puzzler has some of the sharpest writing and acting seen in years, and it’s full of complex heroes, monsters, and themes. It’s an outstanding third-person horror game any horror-lover should play, and it’s Bloober Team’s most ambitious effort yet.—Chris Livingston

Balan Wonderworld – March 26

(Image credit: Square Enix)

More like the game that Square Enix hopes you forgot, Balan Wonderworld is one of the strangest things to come out of a big publisher in years. It’s a 3D platformer with a pair of big names behind it: former Sonic Team boss Yuji Naka, and Sonic character designer Naoto Ohshima. Excitement over Naka making a big-budget 3D platformer, a rarity these days outside Mario, pretty much evaporated once Balan Wonderworld’s demo hit, revealing a one-button control scheme that drove players mad. The rest of the game is full of baffling dance numbers and other weird ideas that don’t really pay off (like charging a full $60), earning Balan Wonderworld an average critic rating of 50. If you remember it, it’s probably because you watched a YouTube video about how bad it was.



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