Tag Archives: The Rise of the Golden Idol

Game of the Year 2024 – Top 10

With all of the other lists behind us, we find ourselves here at the top ten games of 2024. In a year jam-packed with critically acclaimed games, I kind of found myself struggling to find games that resonated with me for large chunks of the year. For example, this was kind of a huge year for JRPGs, which is a genre of game I don’t really enjoy that much. So a lot of the biggest titles from this year are notably absent from this list.

But with that little caveat out of the way, I present to you the top ten games that I played this year.


10 – House Flipper 2

House Flipper 2 is a great example of not messing with success. Built with the same ethos in mind as its predecessor, House Flipper 2 puts a bunch of properties that are in varying states of disrepair in front of you, and tasks you with fixing them up. It’s a simple premise that sounds unremarkable because it is, but I find these kinds of games really calming. Games like this are a great way to occupy my hands while I watch TV or listen to a podcast, and House Flipper 2 is among the best in the biz in that regard.


9 – TCG Card Shop Simulator

Piggy-backing on what I said about House Flipper 2, TCG Card Shop Simulator was a real surprise for me in terms of games I would enjoy. After a miserable few years working in retail, I would never have thought playing a game about running a shop would click with me in the way TCG Card Shop Simulator has. Hell, I don’t even like card games, but selling booster packs to the same 7 ugly character models is actually kind of fun. It also helps that this game presents an idealized version of the world where no one is toxic and shitty. Some people do come in with stink lines around them though, so that is realistic.

It’s unfinished. It’s janky as hell. It’s one of my favorite experiences from this year, and I’m really excited to see this one evolve over time.


8 – Dungeons of Hinterberg

I think the best word to describe Dungeons of Hinterberg would be ‘uneven’. It’s a game that has some pretty glaring mechanical flaws, but makes up for them with clever puzzles and charming characters. I said it back in July, but had this solely been a puzzle game with a heavy focus on social interactions, and not have any combat in it whatsoever, I would have enjoyed it much more. Still, it’s one of the best games I’ve played this year.


7 – Thank Goodness You’re Here

Thank Goodness You’re Here is more of an interactive cartoon than a video game. It’s delightfully weird and hilarious, but you don’t really do anything besides walk around and hit the interact button on people and objects. The story and jokes are the only things that Thank Goodness You’re Here can really hang its hat on, and if they aren’t your jam then there’s nothing here for you. Luckily, I found this game hilarious and thoroughly enjoyed it from beginning to end.


6 – Minishoot’ Adventures

I wasn’t expecting a mashup of top-down Zelda games and shoot-em-ups to be such a compelling combination, but y’all, do not sleep on the terribly named Minishoot’ Adventures. With tons of exploration, navigation-based puzzles, and some pretty excellent shooter mechanics, Minishoot’ Adventures is the video game equivalent of discovering that chocolate and peanut butter go great together.


5 – Animal Well

I’ve already spoken about how much I loved Animal Well, both earlier in the year and earlier this week, so it shouldn’t be a surprise to see it on the top 10. I can’t think of many games I’ve ever played that were as shrouded in mystery as this one is. Every screen — every pixel of this game is deliberately placed to feed into a broader puzzle. Layer by layer you start to peel back this digital onion until you find that at the center, you still have no idea what’s happening.

I mean that in the best way too. I think Animal Well being an enigma is its greatest strength and not a shortcoming. It’s also a really good puzzle-platformer at its core, but what that platformer is in service of is what’s so amazing about Animal Well. It’s opaque and obtuse, but playing Animal Well for the first time was an unforgettable experience.


4 – Chants of Sennaar

Speaking of unforgettable experiences, Chants of Sennaar is one that I won’t ever forget for multiple reasons. Both Animal Well and Chants of Sennaar occupy a similar place of being wonderful “multiplayer” games that my partner and I enjoyed. But we both agree that Chants of Sennaar was the better experience from top to bottom. While it did technically come out last year, we only played it for the first time in 2024.

But for those few days it took us to blitz through the entirety of Chants of Sennaar, it was the only thing we could talk about. I never knew that the act of translating languages could be so engaging, but it is. I really hope another game like this is in development somewhere, because it’s a concept that’s so good that it shouldn’t be limited to one game ever.


3 – The Rise of the Golden Idol

At the end of this block of puzzle-game excellence is The Rise of the Golden Idol, one of the best puzzlers I’ve ever played. It’s a game that’s solely about observing your environment and making logical conclusions based of the information gathered in that, and previous levels.

It boasts remarkably engaging story whose twists and turns are even more impressive because you yourself are uncovering them. Understanding the motives of characters and what their mere presence in a scene implies are some of the most rewarding feelings of puzzle solving I experienced this year, and possibly ever.


2 – Astro Bot

Astro Bot is an incredible 3D platformer that’s either packed with nostalgic delights or filthy with advertisements, depending on who you are. I can understand the viewpoint of the latter, but I err on the side of the former in this regard. Astro Bot is a tremendously fun and positive experience that celebrates the long and storied history of the PlayStation brand.

But it’s more than just a nostalgia trip — it’s a really good platformer at its core that is constantly throwing new things at you, both in terms of mechanics and level design. Divorced from the PlayStation branding, Astro Bot would certainly lose a lot of its charm, but the core gameplay is solid enough that it could support just about any theme you throw at it. It’s truly remarkable and a must have for any PlayStation 5 owner.


1 – Indiana Jones and the Great Circle

There might be a bit of recency bias going on here, but I really do think that Indiana Jones and the Great Circle would have been my favorite game this year regardless of when it came out.

Holy cow, this game came out of nowhere for me and blew me away. Indiana Jones and the Great Circle takes the best parts of immersive-sim games, like Dishonored, and mushes it together with the excellent active stealth you’d see in the modern Hitman games to make something truly amazing.

Every aspect of this game shouldn’t have worked as well as it did, but it came together so perfectly. A large part of it has to be thanks to the phenomenal Harrison Ford impression that Troy Baker does, which once again, was a pretty dicey proposition on paper. But he disappears into the role and truly embodies the role, making it feel like I’m watching a long lost Indiana Jones movie. Which by the way, this is probably the best Indy story since Raiders of the Lost Ark.

But everyone is doing an excellent job portraying their roles in this game. The lead villain, Emmerich Voss, is perfectly portrayed as this slimy, miserable Nazi with the most punch-able face you’ve ever seen. Regardless of which character you’re talking about, everyone is putting in an excellent performance, all of which help to elevate this game.

And what of the game itself? That’s really good too! Machine Games is unsurprisingly adept at making the act punching fascists in the face feel as good as you’d imagine. The sound work is incredible, really emphasizing each hit with a heavy ‘thunk’ noise. Between solid melee combat and the versatility of Indy’s whip, whether it be used as a grappling hook or a cool way to choke fascists out, you have a surprising amount of variety in how you approach each encounter.

Indiana Jones and the Great Circle isn’t a perfect game, but it was the best thing that I played this year.


So that’s it. That was the Game of the Year. I hope you enjoyed it. Consider subscribing to The Bonus World so you can get an email updating you whenever we publish something new.

I’ll be taking some time off, but I’ll catch you all at the end of January. Happy New Year, everybody.

The Spotlight – 10

The Spotlight is a monthly summary that encapsulates some of the more notable media experiences I’ve had over the past thirty days. From insights on games played, to articles worth checking out, and even cool stories from tabletop role-playing games, it all has a place in the Spotlight.

It’s another light month, unfortunately. But now that we’re in December, work can begin on Game of the Year stuff. So that’s exciting.

For the month of November, 2024, here’s what I’m shining the spotlight on.


Games

Dragon Age : The Veilguard

I wrote a whole thing about Dragon Age: The Veilguard that you can read right here, but the short version is that I felt the whole game was really underwhelming. It’s a game that plays it too safely and ultimately fails to establish any real identity of its own.

The Rise of the Golden Idol

Sadly, I’ve only played a handful of levels of The Rise of the Golden Idol, not because I don’t think it’s excellent, but because I want to be able to dedicate my full attention to it and haven’t found that opportunity. For the uninitiated, the Golden Idol games play pretty much identically, and involve you peering into a moment in time, collecting and deciphering clues and then ultimately putting it all together in a cohesive way.

It’s a game about deduction and paying extremely close attention to every clue, no matter how benign they may seem at first. I’ve been playing it on the Xbox, which has been a more fiddly experience than I was hoping for, but I knew what I was getting myself into when buying a game like this on a console. If you’re unsure about if you’d like The Rise of the Golden Idol, its predecessor, The Case of the Golden Idol, is available on Gamepass right now. Like I said, they play identically, so you’ll know pretty quickly if it’s your thing or not.

Super Mario Party Jamboree

I’ve never known any games that were as hateful as the Mario Party series, but that has not stopped my partner and I from playing a truly upsetting amount of the latest entry in the series, Super Mario Party Jamboree. In something of a return to form, Jamboree reminds me a lot of the Nintendo 64 entries in the series, primarily because they’re the only ones I’ve played before, and this one is filled with just as much, if not more, horeshit than ever before.

I assume we all know how this nightmare is played, with the dice, the board, the bad mini-games, the complete random bullshit? Jamboree takes this classic formula and adds a fun new wrinkle in the form of “Jamboree Buddies,” which is a feature you cannot turn off and is completely game breaking unless you’re me and have the luck of someone who’s spent their whole life breaking mirrors and walking under ladders.

See, sometimes some asshole like Waluigi will plop his ass on the board somewhere and wait for someone to come and talk to him. Should you do that, you then compete with everyone else for a chance to have him tag along with you for a few turns. You play his terrible mini-game, and whoever wins gets the “honor” of having him in their retinue. These buddies all have abilities that can either give you better rolls, better prices on items, extra coins and whatnot, but more importantly they act as a second player for you to control. So if you go to a shop to buy an item, you can now buy two. You buy a star, now you can buy two. You land on a Bowser spot, well that’s two beat downs for you. It can make the whole game get out of control really quick and I wish you could toggle this feature off.

The only thing pulling me through these games is my love for my partner, and the fact that I get to play as Monty Mole, the best character in the whole thing.


Watch List

Clone High

Look man, in 2002 or whatever, Clone High was the peak of comedy among my friends and I. Here in 2024 though, it hasn’t aged particularly well. The original series still has its charms despite some questionable subject matter and the fact that the entire licensed soundtrack of indie rock of the era has been ripped out and replaced by way worse music, so that’s something.

In stark contrast is the new continuation of the series that continues the story. It’s really bad. It has none of the aforementioned charm and seems to not understand what made the original run so entertaining in the first place.

Ultimately I think Clone High should have remained a relic of its time, forever leaving us wondering about how its cliffhanger ending could have been resolved.

Upload

What if Facebook owned the afterlife? That’s the core conceit of Upload, a show that sometimes gets a little too real for me to laugh at. Without going too much into story specifics, Upload touches on a lot of topics that I worry will eventually stop being in the realm of science fiction within my lifetime. Questions about who actually owns your digital consciousness when you die are the ones that particularly make me uncomfortable. It’s also a pretty good show too, so you should watch it.


Listening Party

Booster Seat – Spacey Jane

Less Than – Nine Inch Nails

The Remedy – Abandoned Pools


The Rest

Rough Month

For a variety of reasons, November has been a particularly challenging month that hasn’t afforded me a ton a free game time. Hell, even if I had that time, I don’t know that I’ve had the stomach to actually start a new game or get invested in something. I am so tired these days.


News

Nintendo Switch Online Services to be Discontinued in China

Inside the fall of GAME

McDonald’s is Trying to Kill You with a $20 Jug of McRib Sauce

Valve Discusses Half-Life 2 Episode 3 and More!

There’s a New DK Rap and it’s Fine

Man Throws Baby Against Wall In Anger While Playing NBA 2K, Charged With Two Felonies


Thanks for checking out The Spotlight. In lieu of doing game of the year stuff, we’ll be back at the end of January with another installment. Consider subscribing to The Bonus World so you can get an email updating you whenever we publish something new.