Skip to main content

Celebrate AAPI Heritage Month with these stellar games

While the video game industry has a long history in Asian countries like China, Japan, and Korea, it’s important to note that Asian Americans have also played a major role in the development community since the industry’s conception. Asian American creators have helped craft some of the most unique, innovative, and influential games of the past decade, especially when it comes to groundbreaking indies.

In honor of AAPI Heritage Month, we wanted to highlight some of the best indie games from Asian American creators. Seeing as we’re going through a relatively quiet season for AAA games right now, consider this a great time to check these titles out this May.

Spelunky 2

Spelunky 2 - Announcement Trailer

If you’ve yet to play them, Derek Yu’s masterpiece roguelikes are both must-play titles. This platformer is deceptively simple, as players make their way further and further down deadly caves on the moon with a limited toolset. The game is challenging and rewards thoughtful planning and fast reaction times to various traps and obstacles. Spelunky 2’s roguelike setup also makes it an excellent pick-up-and-play game that constantly makes you want to make just one more run. 

Spelunky 2 is available for PC, PS4, Xbox, and Nintendo Switch. It’s even part of Xbox Game Pass, so you have no excuse not to check out one of the best roguelikes ever made. Once you complete that game, we also recommend checking out the original Spelunky, as it still holds up to this day. 

Quadrilateral Cowboy

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Hacking minigames are very common in video games, but few actually make the activity engaging. Quadrilateral Cowboy, from Blendo Games’ Brandon Chung, defies that notion with an excellent game almost entirely about hacking. In Quadrilateral Cowboy, you control a hacker assisting secret agents with pulling off a heist. You type code and create programs to progress, truly making you feel like an expert hacker. 

Its unique approach to gameplay will make the game and its puzzles stick in your mind long after the game is finished. Quadrilateral Cowboy is only available for PC, Mac, and Linux. If you like Blendo Games’ work here, consider checking out Chung’s other games like Gravity Bone, Thirty Flights of Loving, and the upcoming Skin Deep.

Outer Wilds

OUTER WILDS | Reveal Trailer

Outer Wilds is an ambitious adventure game where players explore a vast solar system that resets every 22 minutes. Thanks to an intriguing time loop story about a lost civilization, clever puzzles, and the amount of player agency it allows, Outer Wilds is one of the most clever sci-fi games out there. Outer Wilds‘ developer, Mobius Digital, was founded by former Heroes and Hawaii 5-0 star Masi Oka, who served as executive producer on the title.

Outer Wilds is currently available for PC, PS4, and Xbox One. It’s even on Game Pass for those who want to try it out before buying. You should also check out the game’s fantastic Echoes of the Eye DLC once you finish the main adventure. 

Rakuen

Rakuen Official Trailer

Rakuen was created by Laura Shigihara, a musician best known for her work on the Plants vs. Zombies score. In 2017, she released a simple but heartfelt adventure game of her own. Of course, this game has a fantastic soundtrack, but it also is a poignant adventure game about a boy exploring both a hospital and a fantasy world with his mother. 

Retro game fans will enjoy the 16-bit aesthetic of Rakuen, but the engaging and emotional narrative and incredible soundtrack are what will ensure you stick around. Rakuen is currently only available on PC, Mac, and Linux, and it’s only $3 until May 12 on Steam as part of its five-year anniversary celebration. 

Anodyne 2: Return to Dust

Anodyne 2: Return to Dust - Launch Trailer (Available now!)

Anodyne 2: Return to Dust is a unique 3D platformer and 2D adventure game mash-up where you control a character named Nova who is trying to help free people whose minds are taken over by Nano Dust. While the adventure starts as a 3D platformer styled after games from the early 2000s, delving into a character’s mindscape switches the experience to a 2D style reminiscent of classic Zelda games. It’s an ambitious blend of styles that gets more grand and meta than you’d expect.

Sean Han Tani and Marina Kittaka of Analgesic Productions created the game, and they’ve proven themselves to be among the most clever indie developers working today. Anodyne 2: Return to Dust is available across PC, PS4, Xbox One, and Nintendo Switch. And if you like Anodyne 2, then you might want to check out the original Anodyne, which is available on all of the same platforms.

Battle Chef Brigade

Image used with permission by copyright holder

A cute genre mash-up from Trinket Studios’ Eric Huang, Battle Chef Brigade is part side-scrolling brawler and part matching puzzle game. Players fight monsters to get certain elemental ingredients and then must cook dishes via a match-3 puzzle minigame reminiscent of Puyo Puyo. Perform well, and your dish will be rated highly by judges. 

Battle Chef Brigade is such a wildly unique merging of genres and ideas that it isn’t an experience you can get anywhere else. Fans of food, puzzles, and side-scrolling action should check this game out. Battle Chef Brigade is available for PC, PS4, Nintendo Switch, and Xbox One. 

Tomas Franzese
Tomas Franzese is a Staff Writer at Digital Trends, where he reports on and reviews the latest releases and exciting…
Xbox Game Pass adds a little and loses a lot this month
persona 4 golden 500000 players all out attack

Microsoft revealed the games coming to and leaving Xbox Game Pass this month, and there's an odd imbalance. Only three new games are announced to be coming to the service throughout the rest of January. Still, we will lose six games on January 15, including last year's indie hidden gem Nobody Saves the World and We Happy Few, a title from first-party Xbox studio Compulsion Games. 
As for what's coming to Xbox Game Pass throughout the rest of January, we have three highly anticipated Xbox ports that are day-one launches on the subscription service. Persona 3 Portable and Persona 4 Golden will come to the service on January 19, while Monster Hunter Rise will be added on January 20. All three games will be available across the cloud, console, and PC versions of the service. Meanwhile, the what's leaving on January 15 list is double the length of what's being added:

We Happy Few
Nobody Saves the World
Windjammers 2
The Anacrusis
Pupperazzi
Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc

Read more
The forgotten games of 2022: 7 sleeper hits worth returning to
Three Hopes characters on a stylized purple background.

These days, it's simply impossible to keep up with every great game that releases in a year. With such a mass of experiences to choose from, players have no choice but to curate. That means that every year is bound to produce what I've started calling "forgotten games." It's a term I use to describe sleeper hits that would have garnered attention in a less crowded year, but were simply lost among a sea of great titles.

"Forgotten games" tend to break my heart. Generally, they didn't do anything wrong -- save for maybe skimping on their marketing budgets. They're strong games, just ones that didn't generate conversation. Sometimes it's just that they weren't groundbreaking enough to break into "game of the year" discussions. They're not polarizing or controversial enough to generate discourse. These games simply aren't conversation pieces and that's a difficult place to be in during our social age, which makes them hard to prioritize.

Read more
2022 was excellent for sports games, depending where you looked
The cursed golfer, hitting his shot surrounded by citizens of purgatory

Sports games are one of the most ubiquitous genres in gaming, as NBA 2K, Madden, and FIFA top sales charts every year. These franchises also happen to be some of gaming's most stagnant as their developers and publishers tend to focus on minor tweaks and changes year-over-year rather than significant innovations. The disappointment of games like Madden NFL 23 gives the genre a bad rap, but 2022 was actually one of the best years for sports games in a while. That's thanks to games that were willing to get weird.
Of course, the multi-million dollar mainstay sports franchises aren't going anywhere. That said, games like OlliOlli World, Rollerdrome Cursed to Golf, Windjammers 2, Roller Champions, What the Bat? and even Nintendo Switch Sports pushed the limits of what the genre can do. Sports inherently translate into solid video games, but this year highlighted how those games can go a step beyond, becoming kookier than what's possible in reality. That helped breathe some life into an otherwise stale genre.
Sports games get weird
When looking back at 2022, there are a lot of sports games worth calling out outside of the usual suspects. Nintendo Switch Sports is the hallmark casual sports game from this year, giving people an accessible and motion-control-based way to play golf, badminton, tennis, bowling, chambara, soccer, and volleyball with Nintendo's signature first-party visual flair. Though that was one of the more high-profile twists of the genre, indie developers led the charge, allowing the sports genre to shine this year.

Roll7's OlliOlli World, for instance, is one of my favorite games of the year. Skateboarding games have been a sports gaming mainstay since the 90s, but OlliOlli World realizes that formula in a way that's as fulfilling to play as Sonic the Hedgehog's best games. At its best, OlliOlli World is a colorful, fast-paced 2D platformer where each level has multiple paths that accommodate various player skill levels.
It's not trying to have accurate physics or recreate iconic real-world locations. Instead, it crafts its own vibrant fantasy world where everything is based on skateboarding, and the gameplay gives players enough wiggle room to experiment and possibly fail with flashy tricks. Roll7 didn't stop there, also delivering Rollerdrome, a game that combines score-based rollerblading with shooting to create an action-sports game mix players didn't know they needed.
Playing sports can give you an ultra-focused adrenaline rush, and a game like OlliOlli World and Rollerdrome can achieve that same flow state through gameplay. Meanwhile, other games interpret sports in a brand new way outright.

Read more