Edit: holy shit I turn my head around for one second and I got 40 replies? THANK YOU ALL :D <3

I just rewatched Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight trilogy and following Bane’s and Miranda’s story made me realize that I’m a bit saturated in regards to playing as the hero, the protagonist, the “good guy” in PC games. While I love saving the world as much as the next person, I’d love to play as some perhaps self-righteous villain, or antagonist, or simply somebody portrayed in a way that’s meant to make the player sympathize with questionable morality or, at the very least, be conflicted about why you suddenly find yourself rooting for them.

I’m mostly looking for story driven open world single player games, but any recommendations are welcome. :)

  • impudentmortal@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    The GTA series might be a good example. All of the protagonists of the games commit exceedingly worse crimes as the game progresses but they’re made to be sympathetic since they just want success in a world with not much other opportunities.

    Games with karma systems may work as well if the bad option isn’t overtly evil. I’m thinking games like Dishonored, Fable 3, Undertale, or any Bethesda game.

    Anti-hero protagonists like Kratos from God of War, Arthur Morgan from Red Dead 2, and V from Cyberpunk could also somewhat fit the bill.

    Edit: just watched an Outside Xbox video that summarizes a few games with just this premise.

  • Yesbutnotquite@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Shocked to see no one’s suggested Tyranny yet which is an isometric RPG where you specifically play one of the bad guys. Yeah you can make some “good” decisions but ultimately, you’re a foot soldier for the bad guys. It’s got plenty of that conflict about what’s right and wrong that you’re looking for too!

  • makeshiftreaper@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Disco Elysium’s protagonist is a walking disaster and there are a lot of ways you can play him. Honestly playing him as a totally morally upright professional is one of the harder ways to play. You definitely don’t feel like a hero while you’re playing

    • daannii@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I’m too dumb to play that game. I tried and kept dying during dialogue.

      I didn’t know you could die in a game from saying the wrong thing. But I did multiple times. A few hours in. I was playing on switch and it made me restart from beginning.

      So I gave up and just watched a YouTube on the story.

      Idk I’ve never played a game like that and I’m not sure how the mechanics work. Obviously too dense to figure it out.

      Very cool art style and world building though.

      • Famko@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        A few hours in and you restarted from the beginning? That’s weird considering the game has autosaves, unless there’s a quirk about the switch version.

        Do you remember what dialogue you died on perhaps?

        • daannii@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Yeah it made me start completely fresh both times I died. I was like. Okay well fk this.

          It was on the switch and the way saves work on it are generally different. It didn’t have a “load a specific save” option.

          It just has one save. Automatic.

  • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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    1 month ago

    Saints Row games. They’re like GTA, but increasingly over the top in their parody. You’re the boss of a criminal gang. 2 is still “normal parody” and a bit dated, 3 jumped the shark while doing a kickflip with a jet ski, 4 is even more insane.

    Sleeping Dogs you play as a cop, but you can betray the law and side more with the criminals.

    Warcraft 3 (old but gold) - the human campaign of the base game gets you from a hopeful young paladin prince into a cold, vengeful psychopath; the following undead campaign is said prince (well, king now) finishing the job of killing everyone and further fucking everything. The expansion has 3 extra campaigns, none with “good guys”

    Divinity Original Sin (1 and 2) lets you play as big of an asshole as you’d like. Of the Elder Scrolls games, Morrowind is the one that lets you be the biggest bad guy around (you can still finish the game even if you kill every important npc and break every quest)

  • Feathercrown@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Factorio, you literally colonize alien species and pollute their worlds because you feel like it.

    • THE_GR8_MIKE@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Satisfactory in the same regard as well. At first I felt bad about disrupting the natural landscape. But then I needed more power, and land for my factories. And then more land for more power for more factories on more land. It’s a fun cycle.

      It’s like a different kind of bad guy… a real world kind of bad guy, really.

    • Lilac@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 month ago

      Ig mincecraft in the same vain, if you want to interact with mc villagers in any meaningful/efficient way.

      To get cheap villager trades, you can traumabond them to you by repeatedly letting them get killed by zombies and then resurrecting them.

      If you want your villagers so be safe, as well as have them all near eachother and sorted after traids, you build a “trading hall” where each villager is trapped in a one by on by two big area where they only have a workstation in front of them as well as a window for you to talk/trade with them. (They would probly die sooner or later if you let them run around the world freely, so building this is kinda a must if you spend a significant time getting the good villager traids, which you kinda have to do if you want good enchantments on your tools cuz all the other options to get them suck compared to villagers).

      Villagers are also a good/the only way to automaticaly farm iron or crops, for crops you just trap them in a field and let them work for you. For iron you repeatedly scare them with zombies, so that an iron golem spawns, which you immediately kill in lava, so you can get the iron that it drops.

      • STUNT_GRANNY@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Eh, it was delisted a couple years ago because of expired music licenses. Game was banned in the UAE upon release though.

        Still worth a playthrough. That game was the whole reason why I knew Deep Purple was a band.

        And this is also like the third comment in a row I’ve made about the game lol

  • Apeman42@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Well, I may as well keep plugging my current obsession, Warhammer 40k: Rogue Trader. It’s a CRPG somewhere between BG3 and XCOM in gameplay, with a grimdark-flavored splash of Mass Effect.

    You have 3 “convictions” that many lot of your decisions fall under. Iconoclast is kind of your standard good guy, but maybe somewhat naive trying to be that good guy in the Warhammer verse. But more relevant to you are Dogmatic and Heretic.

    Heretic is pretty much evil as far as I can tell. Chaos worship and slaughter for power. Dogmatic is more like Judge Dredd, maybe? You make some harsh fucking decisions as dogmatic, like liquefying a few thousand people to power a computer you need to use, but you are doing it for what your character truly believes is the greater good of the Imperium.

    Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous, Owlcat’s previous game, has some baddie paths too. You’re still fighting demons, but it’s more of an evil vs evil in some cases. Especially Lich or Swarm.

    • skulblaka@sh.itjust.works
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      I ran Lich path on my first run of WOTR and it might be my favorite CRPG experience I’ve ever played. You’re evil, but you’re lawful evil, and the game gives you the opportunity to lean more lawful which I did. Excellent example of being smart evil instead of stupid evil which is exactly how I think a proper lich should be portrayed.

  • Godric@lemmy.world
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    Mafia series - You play as a murderous mobster

    Tropico series - You play as the dictator of a small banana republic

    Red Dead Redemption - You’re Arthur Morgan, an outlaw who kills for money

      • Godric@lemmy.world
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        While you do get to feed KKK members to the gators and gun down anti-sufferagettes, you also loanshark and rob innocent people amongst other things

        • T00l_shed@lemmy.world
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          Yeah I didn’t like the loan sharking business… and there are some innocent people that get robbed, but much of that is from the story, and there isn’t much you can do about it

  • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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    Spec Ops the Line is probably what you want. It’s not open world, but the story is excellent.
    Bard’s Tale is old, but the story is fun and you aren’t really a good guy.
    Scarface is a GTA reskin that retcons the end of the movie to have Tony Montana live to build a cocaine empire.

  • stringere@sh.itjust.works
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    Planescape: Torment
    Disco Elysium
    Prototype
    Crackdown

    Already mentioned elsewhere but seconding the recommendations: Infamous I and II Bioshock Infinite

  • VerilyFemme@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    Echoing Spec Ops: The Line.

    It’s no longer available on Steam, but if you can find a way to play it then you should. Probably the most necessary game about war at the moment.

      • VerilyFemme@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        Don’t look up anything about it and finish it this weekend. It’s short and linear. If you appreciate a well-crafted narrative with a message, you owe it to yourself to play the full story.