Forgot what made me think about this topic but I’ve been considering this for a week or two… Curious what you all think.

When I mean “hardest” “video game”, I mean whatever game that you find objectively more difficult than all other ones on the market, as long as it’s a video game. I guess exposure to different genres/types of games can influence the answer to this question a lot so… Hence I was curious about your rationale.

I have a pretty solid answer & rationale but I guess I shouldn’t share that in the main post to bias results…

  • P00ptart@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    There is one game, one level, that was so hard to beat that I just gave up and walked away, never to return. The stampede on Lion King from the SNES.

    A lot of games from that era were epically hard; few games had a difficulty setting, a lot of tie-ins meant games looked and played polished but no effort was given to make a solid game, computing power meant there was usually only one way to complete a mission or level. However this was a game made for kids and that fucking game, that fucking level was simply bullshit.

    • otp@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      The Stampede?

      I hardly ever beat Level 2…aka. the platformer version of “I Just Can’t Wait To Be King”.

      And Level 3 has some annoyingly tough jumps too. I think The Stampede is level 4?

      The only way most of us ever played the second half of the game is level select…

    • noseatbelt@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      Even if I somehow managed to outrun the stampede and climb the waterfall, I could never ever manage to beat Scar. Thank goodness for older siblings.

  • otp@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    There are so many kinds of difficulty that this is hard to answer.

    There’s fake difficulty, where the game is just being cheap. Some games are hard because their mechanics or controls are just janky.

    Some games are easy to lock yourself out of the ending and not know it. Try the game from the start again!

    There’s genuinely difficult games, but any time a game is difficult in a “fair” sense, there are people on the internet who’ll beat it with a guitar controller, or blindfolded, or without any power ups.

    If you want a game that not many people could beat…I don’t think many people could beat Bokosuka Wars today…

    • zlatiah@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      I’m glad you mentioned this! I completely agree… Which is kinda why I was asking about this in the first place. I was curious what others consider as objectively “difficult” for them, and I got my answer: my sense of “difficult” is very different from that of most Lemmy users…

      fake difficulty

      IMO I felt a lot of the answers pointed to games that are extremely high on the “cheap” scale… I mean yes cheap games are difficult, but yeah it does feel a bit artificial on the difficulty scale.

      Which is also precisely why I didn’t think of most platformers as among the hardest games. Like for example the original IWBTG; is it difficult? Sure it is, but a large part of it comes from the game being cheap AF… Someone with good platforming skills can clear every section with a few tries. And the higher difficulties just reduce the number of checkpoints, not actually making the game fundamentally more difficult… I mean there are genuinely difficult platformers but there are objectively more difficult games out there

      so many kinds of difficulty

      I’m actually surprised almost no one mentioned any type of PvP games or games that are primarily reliant on competing against other humans… they go insanely hard, but like how much of Street Fighter’s difficulty is you being better than the other person vs just “know how the game works”?

      If you want a game that not many people could beat

      My favourite genre of games almost universally feature levels that probably fewer than 100 people across the world could beat (not counting customs), so… yeah.

    • SSTF@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Precisely. There are games where random factors like a particular loot drop, or doing well in an early battle thanks to random critical hits, or a good randomly generated starting point all determine if the game is reasonably beatable, or if you end up softlocked.

      There are other games with certain, let’s says pranks, played on players with one hit kills that can only be avoided with foreknowledge. In modern games, at least these pranks are made shortly alter save points or there is a Dark Souls like way to regain equipment/progress. In a lot of older games, the player is forced to restart a big chunk of the game. At that point it becomes a test of patience rather than skill to replay the same level over and over.

    • zlatiah@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      Okay that quickly went from “I think I can do this with some practice” to “what the actual fuck” to me… congrats on clearing the game

      I haven’t touched classical bullet hell games since high school so… guess I should give them a try!

        • zlatiah@lemmy.worldOP
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          3 months ago

          I’ve really only played Touhou in middle/high school… Imperishable Night was actually a really formative game for me, loved the OST and played quite a bit out of it. Fairly sure I’ve cleared this particular one on Easy, might have made to Stage 5/6 on Normal… Definitely didn’t clear Scarlet Devil on Normal because my motor skills were terrible back then

          I should be able to clear Normal/Hard now that I’m older and more skilled. If I have the patience/time that is…

          Edit: apparently I forgot how to do math and got the game release numbers wrong

          • 🐋 Color 🍁 ♀@lemm.ee
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            3 months ago

            That’s awesome! Loved Imperishable Night too, I played it so much along with Perfect Cherry Blossom and Subterranean Animism. As for Embodiment of Scarlet Devil it’s generally considered one of the harder games of the series

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Just try to play Dwarf Fortress, and you’ll drop any other opinion on this subject. Especially the ASCII version of the game, not the fancy graphical one.

    • BaroqueInMind@lemmy.one
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      3 months ago

      Adventure Mode is even more difficult within Dwarf Fortress: I once had a fresh character start in a village and he died from blood loss while I was grinding levels by wrestling salmon in a nearby river, and it bit my characters toe off.

      • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        That’s the kind of stories only DF writes. No other game comes even close to this.

        I have to admit that I have never done adventure mode, and can’t do it now as I am to busy with my other hobbies to play anything but a quick round of solitaire. But DF will always hold a special place in my heart, and I hope I can one day play the courage 1.0 version of it.

    • chunkystyles@sopuli.xyz
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      3 months ago

      I can’t speak for ASCII mode. But DF is not hard, once you learn the game, unless you specifically go looking for a challenge.

      The only real difficulty is just how much there is to learn about the game.

      If you build defenses, never dig too deeply, and learn the basics of keeping your dwarves happy, you could play a fortress for hundreds of in game years. But that would get boring.

      • sushibowl@feddit.nl
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        3 months ago

        Having played a lot of Dwarf fortress in ascii mode as well as with tilesets, I agree with you. It’s not especially difficult to make a successful fortress. However the game is definitely obtuse, even more so with the ascii graphics. Just figuring out what is happening on the screen and which combination of buttons to press to do what you want is quite difficult.

        The steam release does some work to remedy the situation though.

  • Kayday@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Fear and Hunger is a contender. If you aren’t aware, imagine a JRPG where you kill god at the end, but you don’t ever level up. Also the first enemy you fight is very likely to kill you, and has just as much of a chance of doing so on your 100th playthrough. Oh, and you start from the beginning every time you die.

    • Clbull@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Fear and Hunger seemed like an interesting game, until I found out the true horrors of what some of the enemies do to you, and that put me off. If you think getting your head pecked off by the Crow Mauler is bad, what if I told you that rape is a highly recurring theme in that game?

      • Kayday@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I haven’t played it myself, but I understand there are mods to remove nudity at least, and I would expect the sexual violence as well. That would be a requirement for me to try it.

        • Clbull@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Such a mod does exist, and I’d be shocked if it didn’t also remove any scenes of sexual violence.

          An example of what I mean is the Harvestman, which the video doesn’t fully explain and for good reason. He not only begins the fight creepily caressing members of the party, but from the third turn onwards his attack becomes a coin flip.

          Fail it, and it’s an instant game over, where you’re treated to a cutscene where the Harvestman breaks your limbs then fists you to death.

  • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    Probably some of the old Nintendo games. Silver surfer is an extremely difficult bullet hell. Battletoads required insane memorization and timing, pretty sure you had to act before the game even told you in some places.

  • The Giant Korean@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Shattered Pixel Dungeon with all 9 challenges active. I know there are a few people who have won the game with all 9, but my god is it hard.

        • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 months ago

          Thank you! I’m aways stuck. My longest run is level… five? I haven’t played for a few days since I realized I can use the clock button to wait a turn, letting foes come to me and not being the first attacked.

          I have so much to learn.

          • The Giant Korean@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            If you want some basic tips, here is what has worked well for me:

            • Surprise enemies as often as you can so you get auto hits (use doors)
            • Focus on one character at a time until you win, then move on to the next - each one requires a different strategy
            • Save up your enchantment scrolls until you get good weapons, armor, rings, etc. Don’t dump your enchantment scrolls into a dagger or leather armor. Hold out for a great sword, great axe, etc. and plate armor.
            • Save up scrolls of mapping and potions of mind vision for the demon halls (last levels of the game). They are full of traps and fairly tough enemies so having maps and knowing where enemies are is huge.
  • ptc075@lemmy.zip
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    3 months ago

    I always put the original Blaster Master on the NES up there.

    It had no save capability at all, nor any codes to stop & restart later. When you sit down, you better be ready to do the whole 4+ hours in one playthrough (or just leave the NES on & walk away).

    But the kicker was that once you got hit just a few times, you might as well restart. The gun (in person mode) would power down with each hit, and after a few hits, well, you just didn’t have enough ‘oomph’ to kill the bosses. But the power-ups to get the gun were fairly sparse in the first place, so once you got hit, it wasn’t like you could just retrace your steps & power up again.

    Mildly interesting, at least to me, I understand it’s been remastered for the Switch. It now has save points AND being hit doesn’t reduce your gun’s power. That would make it a completely different game. I’m be curious to check it out someday. If nothing else, I’m curious to see how much of it I remember. I suspect I can autopilot the first 2 hours, despite it being 40(?) years later.

  • CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Toss up between RC Pro-Am and Ninja Gaiden on the NES. I beat them both and they were both a real bitch. So, so many times I got to the final race or stage and couldn’t do it… so you start all over from the beginning.

    Games like that don’t exist anymore.

  • AndrewZabar@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Faster Than Light.

    Seriously you could play ten games a day for a year and not even come close to winning, even if you’re quite good at it.

  • anon@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    don’t starve adventure mode

    this cute little game took me years to beat. souls games don’t even come close to it (and I love them very much)

    it will throw a wrench into your plans at every step. the designers seem to have worked closely with psychiatrists to make you think you have figured it out only to destroy again and again and again

    • Orangenkuchen@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      What makes it so hard is, that most of the problems you’re gonna face (starvation, sanaty, freezing, missing wappons/armor for battles) can be avoided/overcome easily only if you are prepared. Once the problems are here you often have no chance to deal with them when unprepared.

      So after a while it becomes a constant danger evaluation in your head: There is an enemy… Fight or avoid? If i fight i might get hurt. Do i have time do find stuff to heal after the fight? And so on…

      And adventure mode adds even more problems to the mix.

      After writing this i realised that this sounds really stressful. But at the same time this is why i like this game so much :]