So today we are in 2015 so let's see what games did make 2014 a great gaming year which games did made a place for them selves, so without any delay lets begin.

In the 10th place we have: the wolf among us 


     What kind of person are you?  As The Wolf Among Us unfolds before your eyes, instantly immersing you in its dark world, the choices that decide who you are Wolf is become just as important as the murders you're trying to solve.
     The Wolf Among Us excels at weaving an amazing tale that you can sink you in it.
     Its fantastical characters are compelling and endearing, making you care about them and dread that they'll be the next to meet an untimely demise. All of that is bound together by an intense mystery, and from the moment the wrong person shows up on Bigby's doorstep, you want to figure out why. Through every action you make along the way, you learn a little more about who Bigby is. That might be the most graceful thing this game does: it shows that in moments of chaos, all you really control is you. And that can make a big difference.

In the 9th place : child of light 

     Child of Light is a magical RPG adventure, but it's not about Prince Charming, frogs, or happily ever after. Darker and more mature themes such as love, loss, and betrayal are woven into this beautiful story. It's not often that you get to play as a child heroine - but despite her young age, Aurora is a character you can truly admire.
      The enchanting world of Lemuria is a splendor to look at and explore, but what makes the experience truly memorable is the powerful and moving score. It doesn't matter if you're up against a boss or the tiniest spider-like minion that surprised you - when the music swells, you feel like you're in the most important battle ever. All this gets wrapped around basic RPG mechanics, but it's simple, elegant, and a joy to play.

In 8th place : P.T silent hill

    Even if it is only a demo P.T. is probably the truest horror game we've seen in a generation. more profound, intelligently terrifying psychological horror experience, it's one of the most complete executions of directorial vision the genre has ever seen.
    Fiendishly creative with its economy of structure, truly upsetting in its tone and spiraling subtextual depth, this is real, total horror, optimized for the interactive medium but unhampered by any of its decrepit, mechanical design tropes. Short, contained, yet utterly complete, and filled with more meaning and power than most games five times its length, P.T. could very well change horror gaming forever.
In 7th place : super smash bros

    There's no wrong way to play Super Smash Bros. for Wii U. You've got a lot of options at your disposal - which of the 51 characters you pick; the number of players facing off in a match; the stage they'll brawl on; whether
or not items will rain from the sky. But no matter which combination you end up with, fun and glory are the only possible outcomes. Like any accessible, exceptionally playable game, learning Smash Bros. takes minutes while mastery requires years of devotion. Oh, and it lets you pit Wii Fit Trainer against Mega Man, which is totally and irrefutably awesome.

In the 6th place: bayonetta 2

Bayonetta 2 is astonishing. Its pacing may be slightly off and it can sometimes get a bit too chaotic to tell what's going on - but when it works, it's a glistening jewel of an action game.



Its sense of spectacle is arguably greater than even God of War 3, from the very first angel-slaying brawl atop a fighter jet that's flying at Mach 2. The fighting system is intuitive yet deep, complex and upgradeable. Versatile, too, as you change weapons on Bayonetta's limbs, turning the sassy lead character into your own perfectly-honed instrument of destruction. It's so, so slick, and you need to play it.

In the 5th place: far cry 4

Iterating Far Cry 3's excellent, open-world FPS playground into something friendlier and more immediate, this is a game that just wants you to have big fun, cutting you loose to do exactly that at the very first opportunity, this what far cry 4 is all about.


Its Himalayan setting is at once spellbindingly beautiful and hilariously anarchic, packed with picturesque vistas, majestic wildlife, and endless scope for creative havoc. And 'creative' really is the word. Between its wealth of eclectic weapons, vehicles, and skills, mixed with your own imagination, Far Cry 4 is just a wonderful sandbox for pure, giddy exhilaration.

In the 4th place : dark soul 2
   After you've played through Dark Souls 2, everything else is a baby game. Other action RPGs have hand-holding tutorials,
regenerating health, and even NPCs to guide you through missions. Not Dark Souls 2, though. The realm of Drangleic - with its poisonous pits, unforgiving enemies, and lethal bosses - punishes carelessness. But if you push past your impatience and actually learn from your mistakes, the rewards for your tenacity are oh-so gratifying.
   Earning super cool armor and weapons after a hard-fought battle is just icing on the cake. It's the satisfaction you get from overcoming that seemingly insurmountable boss or string of traps that makes Darks Souls 2 incredible. Narrowly escaping death and coming out on top is the greatest feeling in the world. Whether you're battling other players online or venturing headlong into the monster-infested world, death is your teacher. If you heed its lessons, you're in for one of the best experiences to be had all year.

In the 3rd place : alien isolation 
Alien: Isolation is the most important evolution that either stealth or horror have seen in years. Revisiting the long-neglected art of artificial intelligence in previously unimaginable style, its nightmarish,
unpredictable, truly terrifying recreation of H.R. Giger's Xenomorph is a revelation unexplainable to those who haven't encountered it. Isolation devastates the rulebook on stealth gameplay, laughing in the face of our previous, feeble definitions of survival horror in the process. There are no safety nets here. No convenient patterns of behaviour to learn. No permanently safe areas to hide in.

In the 2nd place : dragon age inquisition 
Dragon Age: Inquisition is about making you feel like a boss. Whether it's kicking back on your throne as you dispense imperial justice, or giving orders to your armies on the massive war map, Inquisition is filled with little touches that put you in command of something larger than yourself. This sense of duty permeates the entire game, and gets you invested in its sprawling, intricate world. Plus, it feels freaking awesome to stroll down your great hall and think, 'Aw yeah, all me baby!'



Of course, Inquisition does plenty of other things right besides reminding you of your awesomeness. Several features that were scaled back in Dragon Age 2 have been smartly expanded upon here, reaching a nice equilibrium between the strategic gameplay of  Origins and the flashy action of its sequel. These features and more - all molded around the theme of being a butt-kicking, take-charge Inquisitor - make Dragon Age: Inquisition the new gold standard for BioWare RPGs.

In the 1st place the game of the year: destiny


  Destiny is described as "Vast, beautiful, and endlessly satisfying".Finish the campaign, and you've only learned the basics. As the hours and XP levels go on, Bungie's sci-fi epic continues to expand and evolve. New economies appear, providing access to more power, complex facets of the already peerless gun play, and whole new ways of perceiving and interacting with its universe. New classes of weapons and armor bring
critical perks and considerations, changing the way you play and turning a great shooter into an unfathomably deep, player-shaped experience. Then the Raid delivers some of the most elegant, intelligent, and utterly unique gameplay ever encountered in an FPS.
  
 Delivering the obsession-forming depth of the full-fat MMO experience in a more palatable, streamlined form, and woven seamlessly with what would be a best-in-class shooter on its own, Destiny is a game-changing landmark. It encapsulates how far both shooters and online console gaming have come, and sketches a very exciting road map for this new generation's future.






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