Summary
- Indie games encompass a diverse range of genres and styles, challenging the idea that open-world and dungeon-crawler games are exclusive to major studios.
- Titles like Kena: Bridge of Spirits and Hades showcase indie excellence with impressive visuals, compelling narratives, and tight gameplay mechanics.
- Despite limited resources, indie developers like Team Cherry create masterpieces like Hollow Knight, proving detailed world-building and tight controls are possible in indie games.
Today, indie games have a sterling reputation thanks to the creative genius and style displayed by the creme of the self-funded crop. However, not all indie games are guaranteed future classics, and many of these games ship with more scuffs than most gamers can handle due to a lack of funds to cover the costs of playtesting and polishing.
Related
12 Best Open-World Games Made By Indie Developers
Open-world games are often associated with triple-A blockbusters, but these indie games prove that the genre isn’t impenetrable to indie developers.
Because they do not have the same amount of resources that AAA games (so named to signal reliably large profits to investors), indies tend to be small, focused, and good at what they do, but some games have come out of the gate with all the luster usually only afforded to studios with massive allowances: astounding visuals, wide scope, and long playtime.
Kena: Bridge Of Spirits
Bridging The Gap Between Two Worlds
- Released
-
September 21, 2021
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Strong
Most people would be surprised to learn that Kena: Bridge of Spirits is an indie product, given its high level of polish, presentation, and Pixar-like character design and animation. The game follows Kena, a young spirit guide, as she helps restless spirits move on while making a sacred pilgrimage.
Kena: Bridge of Spirits comes between two worlds in more ways than one. Ember Lab had cut its teeth in character design and animation, which is how many of the characters in the game come off with such fluid liveliness. Kena was independently financed and developed, but its design and world are more reminiscent of old-school, big-named platformers and action-adventure games of the sixth console generation.
Death’s Door
A Grim Adventure Worth Dying For
- Released
-
July 20, 2021
- Developer(s)
-
Acid Nerve
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Mighty
Death’s Door proves that the classic dungeon crawler still has a lot of life left in it, even when its themes revolve around the reaping of souls. With games like The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom, Nintendo clearly hasn’t abandoned the traditional top-down format, but they don’t have a monopoly on it either.
Related
8 Best Dungeon Crawler Horror Games
Dungeon crawling and horror blend brilliantly together, and these games represent the best of both genres.
Death’s Door mixes tightly designed combat, clever puzzles, and an eerie yet charming world where crows act as reapers of lost souls. Every stage feels meticulously crafted, with secrets and challenges that reward exploration and persistence.
Hades
The Immortal God Of Roguelikes
- Released
-
September 17, 2020
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Mighty
The indie (and ironically named) Supergiant Games redefined the roguelike genre in 2020 with Hades, blending relentless action, rich storytelling, and a flair of Greek mythology and style. Stunning art direction and fluid combat work in tandem while Zagreus traverses the ultimate, never-ending dungeon: the underworld itself.
Every escape attempt is as much about uncovering family secrets and divine rivalries as it is about survival, making every inevitable defeat still feel like progress. With its razor-sharp mechanics, unforgettable characters, and dynamic narrative, Hades is a prime example of indie excellence easily rivaling the moneyed grandeur of AAA development.
Subnautica
An Indie Both As Wide And As Deep As An Ocean
Survival
Horror
Open-World
Science Fiction
- Released
-
January 23, 2018
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Mighty
Open-world games with base-building mechanics are usually the domain of the big boys in gaming, but Subnautica somehow manages to make deep-ocean exploration feel satisfyingly vast without overstaying its welcome while stripping away many of the tedious elements that can make crafting in similar games feel like a chore.
Related
8 Open-World Games With The Best Base Building Mechanics
A successful combination of open-world exploration and creative base-building mechanics is downright addictive. Here are the games that do it best.
However, Subnautica always strives to make players feel like they are pushing for progress with every fathom deeper they go into the ocean. Base building is not just a side feature but feels like a way to escape to a vital sanctuary in an ocean of pressure and dangerous monsters.
Outer Wilds
A Tightly-Designed And Mysterious Creation
- Released
-
May 28, 2019
- Developer(s)
-
Mobius Digital
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Mighty
When working on a budget, time is hardly an infinite resource. This is not so in Outer Wilds, where the bite-sized solar system resets every twenty-two minutes, both hindering and aiding the player in their quest to unravel the time-locked mystery. Players are limited by time, but they are not as limited by space, thanks to their rustic spacecraft, which they are free to fly around basically from the get-go.
Although the system is miniaturized, explorable space, with each of its planets and satellites, still feels wonderfully vast. The technology under The Outer Wilds’ hood is a testament that sometimes it only takes a good idea and clever coding, not necessarily a publisher with deep pockets, to realize an amazing game.
Hollow Knight
Reclaiming A Beloved Style And Genre With Soul
- Released
-
February 24, 2017
- Developer(s)
-
Team Cherry
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Mighty
While 2D animation has practically disappeared since the 2000s, the appetite for it has not, as evidenced by the popularity of a game like Hollow Knight. Its stellar presentation, with its hand-drawn visuals and haunting sound design, makes it look and feel like something from a powerhouse studio. However, Team Cherry is made up of a handful of people.
Related
7 Games That Let You Play As An Insect
Several video games over the years have allowed players to take on the role of insects. These are some of the more memorable examples.
Despite the studio’s tiny size, they managed to produce a deadly underground game world brimming with melancholic atmosphere, well-hidden secrets, tight controls, and some of the best Metroidvania level design for games in general, not just from the indie crowd.
Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice
The Binding Of Two Worlds
- Released
-
August 16, 2017
- OpenCritic Rating
-
Mighty
The astounding level of detail in Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice isn’t just confined to Melina Juergens’ excellent face-captured performance and the overall haunting environmental design. What could be mistaken as a cinematic indie slasher uses dark fantasy tropes to recreate the harrowing experience and unseen suffering often experienced by those with mental illness that can often feel impossible to convey through written or spoken reportage.
It is unlikely that this kind of risky subject matter would be laid out as a full AAA game, and indeed, Senua’s Sacrifice was not put together and funded by a large publisher but by the twenty or so people at Ninja Theory, who, conscious of the extremely polished presentation mixed with the delicate and intimate subject matter, described Hellblade as a “AAA indie.”
More
These excellent indie games offer dynamic and evocative storytelling, delivering narrative-rich experiences for players to enjoy.
Leave a Reply