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The 7th Guest cover
The 7th Guest (1993) lured you into Henry Stauf's creaky mansion with shiny CD-ROM swagger and smirking FMV ghosts.
The 7th Guest
1993 β€’ PC
Pixel8Games 89% Users β€”
Puzzles, phantoms, bad decisions
Raid Over Moscow cover
Raid Over Moscow (1984) served Cold War panic as an arcade sampler platter: launch the interceptor, dodge defences, blow the silos, then head for the Kremlin like you'd lost a bet.
Raid Over Moscow
1984 β€’ Amstrad β€’ Apple II β€’ Atari 8-bit +2 more
Pixel8Games 80% Users β€”
The empire strikes back
Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe cover
Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe took the idea of a friendly sports match, threw it out of an airlock, and replaced it with metal armour and flying elbows.
Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe
1990 β€’ Amiga β€’ Atari ST β€’ Commodore 64
Pixel8Games 83% Users β€”
Enjoy a clean break
Doom cover
Doom started as a quiet Mars assignment and immediately escalated into shotguns, demons, and a full-blown trip to Hell.
Doom
1993 β€’ PC β€’ PS1 β€’ SNES
Pixel8Games 94% Users β€”
One hell of a blast.
Wipeout cover
Wipeout (1995) hurled you into anti-gravity racing where the tracks looked like nightclub flyers and the speed felt borderline irresponsible.
Wipeout
1995 β€’ PC β€’ PS1 β€’ Saturn
Pixel8Games 89% Users β€”
Speed with teeth
Target Renegade cover
Target: Renegade (1988) strutted in like a street brawler with a bad attitude and a worse neighborhood.
Target Renegade
1988 β€’ Amstrad β€’ Commodore 64 β€’ NES +1 more
Pixel8Games 75% Users β€”
Street justice, cheap shots
Bruce Lee cover
Bruce Lee blended martial arts, platforming, and exploration into something quietly special.
Bruce Lee
1984 β€’ Amstrad β€’ BBC β€’ Commodore 64 +1 more
Pixel8Games 84% Users β€”
Be water, my friend.
Maniac Mansion cover
Maniac Mansion (1987) invited you to pick a trio of teenagers and trespass into the Edison household, where every room hid a gag, a trap, or a way to accidentally doom your friends.
Maniac Mansion
1987 β€’ Amiga β€’ Apple II β€’ Atari ST +3 more
Pixel8Games 79% Users β€”
Break in, think
Jimmy White's Whirlwind Snooker cover
Jimmy White's Whirlwind Snooker (1991) swaggered onto the 16-bit scene like a pub-hero with a brand-new cue - loud, quick, and convinced every pot was on.
Jimmy White's Whirlwind Snooker
1991 β€’ Amiga β€’ Atari ST β€’ Mega Drive +1 more
Pixel8Games 84% Users β€”
Right on cue
Monaco GP cover
Monaco GP (1979) delivered white-knuckle racing long before realism was a selling point.
Monaco GP
1979 β€’ Arcade
Pixel8Games 79% Users β€”
Shift up, survive
Descent cover
Descent (1995) took a normal corridor shooter, spun it in every direction, then asked you not to be sick.
Descent
1995 β€’ PC
Pixel8Games 90% Users β€”
Six degrees of panic
OutRun cover
OutRun wasn't about winning races, it was about vibes.
OutRun
1986 β€’ Amiga β€’ Amstrad β€’ Arcade +4 more
Pixel8Games 88% Users 100%
Choose your route. Chase the horizon.
Tetris cover
Tetris was the sort of game that looked like office software, then quietly stole entire evenings.
Tetris
1984 β€’ Amstrad β€’ Commodore 64 β€’ PC
Pixel8Games 80% Users β€”
One more piece
Impossible Mission cover
Impossible Mission (1984) politely greeted players with an ominous β€œStay awhile… stay forever!” before immediately trying to kill them.
Impossible Mission
1984 β€’ Amiga β€’ Amstrad β€’ Commodore 64
Pixel8Games 90% Users β€”
Timing is everything
Rise of the Triad cover
Rise of the Triad (1994/95) took the Wolfenstein-style corridor shooter, chugged a can of soda, then started doing backflips.
Rise of the Triad
1994 β€’ PC
Pixel8Games 86% Users β€”
Ludicrous gibs!
Ghosts 'n Goblins cover
Ghosts 'n Goblins (1985) gleefully armed Sir Arthur, knocked his armour off within seconds, and then kept kicking him while he was already down.
Ghosts 'n Goblins
1985 β€’ Amiga β€’ Amstrad β€’ Arcade +4 more
Pixel8Games 78% Users β€”
Die. Retry. Repeat.
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