depingus
Anyone interested in CRPG design should really check out Tim Cain's youtube channel. He is the creator of Fallout. His channel is treasure trove of information and industry experience you won't find anywhere else.

https://www.youtube.com/@CainOnGames/videos

teroshan
It's a beautiful coffee table book, I love opening a page randomly and (re)discovering a game.

If you're more into JRPGs, Bitmap Books has got you covered as well [1]:

[1]: https://www.bitmapbooks.com/products/a-guide-to-japanese-rol...

aidenn0
TFA links to a "best of:" https://rpgcodex.net/content.php?id=9453

A discussion of that list might be interesting, since it will always be very subjective. In particular, I tried really hard to like Planescape: Torment since I like story-driven games, but I was only able to tolerate it for maybe 8 hours before I put it down and never picked it up again.

Arcanum is also interesting to be at #5, and I agree with the text of the reviews; it does such a good job of almost succeeding at so many of its ambitions that its easy to forgive how bad the rest of the game is. Kind of a "shot for the stars and landed on the moon" sort of game.

I was also mildly surprised to see Betrayal at Krondor at #16 with no mention of how the last third of the game is mediocre. I think the first 2/3 of the game would put it closer to #10.

Also somewhat surprised that the core Ultima (as opposed to Underworld) games were as low as they are and that IV ranked so far above V (even one of the reviewers for Ultima V said it was a far better game than IV).

cheeseomlit
Looks really comprehensive, thanks for sharing. Can't wait to dig in and add more stuff to my ever-expanding backlog. Loving all the screenshots too, something about that 90s-era pixel art is just so soulful and charming.
aidenn0
I do not own this book, but I do own another book published by Bitmap Books, and I can say the product quality is significantly higher than I expected for a $50 book (which was my main worry when I ordered it).
timbit42
I was expecting this to be related to the CRPG Addict

http://crpgaddict.blogspot.com/

syldarion
This and 'The Games That Weren't' [1] are my favorite coffee table books. Like another commenter, I tend to just open to a random page and it's always a great tidbit of learning about gaming's history.

[1]: https://www.bitmapbooks.com/collections/all-books/products/t...

podiki
My first HN post, in 2017 :) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14145252
ChrisArchitect
colkassad
First sentence of the book needs some editing:

"When thinking about where a book dedicated to computer RPGs might come from, one might Germany, Canada, UK or the US."

proxysna
Beautiful stuff, glad to see that Underrail also made it into the book. Underrail is probably the best Fallout-like game.
vunderba
Super happy to see Betrayal at Krondor get a mention in the book. It was one of my favorite games as a kid, and the deft writing is arguably unsurpassed in the RPG world. The music is just absolutely perfect, too.

The only real weakness this game had was how easy it was to completely break the combat system. Skin of the Dragon is the most OP spell in the world. It's basically invulnerability for X rounds. And when I say invulnerability, I don't just mean physical attacks, but also magic, status effects—basically everything. It's cheap enough from a mana perspective to just have Owen quickly throw it on all your party members at the beginning of any combat situation.

Did I mention you can pick up the spell for free near the beginning of the game? I used to deliberately avoid it just to help balance things a bit.

theogravity
I have this book; it's a great book for enthusiasts.
VyseofArcadia
I own a physical copy. Great book.
ecshafer
Their definition of CRPG seems really broad. I have never seen handheld games like pokemon included in that.
Sakos
This looks fantastic. Can't wait to get a printed version.

Anybody have further suggestions for books about games I should own?