36 Classic PC Games From The '90s That Still Hold Up

Kyle Townsend
Updated May 15, 2024 156.3K views 36 items
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8.7K votes
1.6K voters
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Vote up all your favorite old-school computer games from yesteryear.

The 90s were a golden era for PC gaming, a time when groundbreaking genres took shape and digital worlds enchanted us in ways we'd never experienced before. Think back to times when strategy sessions with Command & Conquer consumed entire weekends or when the quirky narrative of Grim Fandango had us glued to our screens. Those days of gaming glory don't need to be tucked away in nostalgia's vault, especially since digital platforms like Steam have now made it a breeze to dive back into these retro favorites.

This list, meticulously curated by PC gaming aficionados, rounds up 35 of the finest games from the 90s that still capture our imaginations. Each game brought something special to the table upon its release and has left an indelible mark on gaming history. Granted, while some have withstood the test of time more gracefully than others, they all embody a certain nostalgic charm that resonates with those who were there when these titles first hit the scene.

Examine these 35 nostalgia-packed games and make your voice heard. Upvote the 90s PC games that you think remain outstanding gems worthy of today's screens, and downvote the ones that don't quite stand the test of time. Your votes will guide new gamers on which classics are a must-play and which they might pass on. Join us in this retro gaming journey to celebrate the games that paved the way for the modern masterpieces we enjoy today.

Most divisive: Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee
Over 1.6K Ranker voters have come together to rank this list of 36 Classic PC Games From The '90s That Still Hold Up
  • 1
    717 VOTES
    Doom
    Photo: id Software

    It's pretty rare to find a game that practically invented a genre and is still fun as heck to play. Although Doom isn't actually the first FPS (that honor probably goes to its predecessor, Wolfenstein 3D), it's the one that put everything together into a completely satisfying experience.

    Ultima 1, or Dune 2 (arguably the first true 'RTS'), or the first King's Quest have their charms, but you have to make allowances for the time they were made to really enjoy them. Not Doom. You can just dive right in. The demons are out there. Are you tough enough to blow them away?

    You can get Doom on gog.com or on Steam.

    717 votes
  • 2
    486 VOTES

    Half-Life brought a new level of storytelling panache to the still-young FPS genre. Instead of just dropping the player into monster-filled levels, Half-Life slowly introduced its situations with in-engine cutscenes, expository dialogue, and deliberate-yet-relentless pacing. You play Gordon Freeman, a mild-mannered nuclear physicist at the Black Mesa Research Facility who gets caught up in a teleportation experiment gone horribly awry. Before long, you're grappling with an invasion of hostile extraterrestrials - as well as soldiers whose job is to clean up the mess by eradicating anything that moves, friend or foe. Overseeing the proceedings is a mysterious G-Man who bears a striking similarity to The X-Files's Cigarette Smoking Man, and whose presence adds a frisson of government paranoia to the experience.

    Half-Life's creative creature designs, superb enemy A.I., palpably atmospheric setting, and masterful pacing all combined to make it an instant classic, quite possibly the best FPS of all time. Its graphics are quite dated by now, but the gameplay remains superb - particularly the tense encounters with enemy grunts who will take cover and even try to flank you. You can play Half-Life in its original incarnation on Steam, or you can try Black Mesa, an acclaimed fan-made update/remaster that is truly a labor of love.

    486 votes
  • Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings
    Photo: Microsoft

    The late 1990s were arguably the golden age of the real-time strategy genre, and one of that age's pinnacles was this fantastic followup to 1997's Age of Empires. The action moves from antiquity to the medieval era, and improved unit AI (check out those sweet marching formations!) makes the battles feel more epic than before.

    Although the prevalence of early rush tactics means some matches end before anyone even builds a castle, other games can blossom into true empire-vs.-empire slugfests. Some of the greatest RTS units of all time live here, from the deadly English Longbowman to the breathtakingly powerful trebuchet.

    The game's available on Steam, in both a modestly updated HD Edition and a new Definitive Edition.

    562 votes
  • 4
    529 VOTES
    Diablo
    Photo: Blizzard Entertainment

    CRPG fans didn't quite know what to make of Diablo when it released in 1996. It didn't have much story, character customization was minimal, and the gameworld was mostly limited to a town and the dungeon underneath it. But Diablo wasn't trying to be Ultima or Might and Magic. It was its own thing - a Skinner-box fantasia in which you clicked on minions of evil, ended their sad little lives, and scooped up loot in their wake.

    Thus was born the modern action RPG. Diablo was a massive hit, spawning two sequels (with a third on the way) and imitators too numerous to mention. The graphics and interface have dated somewhat, but that old pull remains.

    Diablo (with its expansion, Hellfire) can be purchased on gog.com.

    529 votes
  • 5
    428 VOTES
    Duke Nukem 3D
    Photo: Gearbox

    Duke Nukem was the spitting image of what little boys wanted to look like when they grew up. He was a handsome dude with machismo to spare, who wore sunglasses and a red tank top, and didn't take crap from anybody. Duke Nukem 3D let you live out this fantasy while battling aliens across highly interactive environments with an array of weird, creative weapons.

    It's a great game to turn your brain off and have some fun. As for its long-delayed sequel, Duke Nukem Forever? That's a long story.

    You can buy Duke Nukem 3D on Steam.

    428 votes
  • Command & Conquer
    Photo: Electronic Arts

    Before games like Starcraft came and dominated the RTS genre, there was Command & Conquer. This early RTS epic took place in a fictional modern-day setting where the player would take control of one of two factions, the Global Defense Initiative (GDI) or the mysterious Brotherhood of Nod. Players must build a base and a military, launch attacks at their enemy, and defend their base, all in real time.

    While the RTS didn't start here (Dune 2, among others, predated it), Command & Conquer's slick production values and commercial success helped solidify the genre's core gameplay.

    A remastered version of Command & Conquer and its follow up, Red Alert, is set to release in June 2020.

    441 votes
  • 7
    429 VOTES

    Quake

    After the success of Doom, John Carmack and the gang at id Software realized how much potential online multiplayer had in first-person shooters. With that in mind, they reworked the Doom code to create the Quake engine. Its full freedom of vertical movement advanced Quake beyond the "2.5D" technology of Doom and its peers, while the Lovecraftian Gothic vibe opened a new tonal palette for the genre.

    Quake was also the first game to have maps designed specifically for multiplayer. It allowed for eight players to play in a match, which was double the standard at the time. The modern FPS can be said to begin here.

    You can buy Quake on gog.com and on Steam.

    429 votes
  • Unreal Tournament
    Photo: Epic

    If you were a gamer in 1999, one of the issues of the day was the battle between Quake III: Arena and Unreal Tournament. Which would emerge to be the king of the multiplayer FPS genre? The question was never really resolved, and to this day it can trigger flame wars in online discussion groups. UT brought some great things to the table, like dazzling sci-fi settings, a campaign mode that's more fun than a tacked-on single player experience has any right to be, and an impressive array of weapons that added much-needed punch to the imaginative Unreal arsenal.

    The graphics at the time were best-in-class (and honestly they still look pretty good), and the bot AI set a new standard.

    You can get Unreal Tournament on Steam and on gog.com.

    322 votes
  • 9
    304 VOTES
    Fallout
    Photo: Bethesda Softworks

    The Fallout series is still one of the most popular RPG franchises in the world. Although the original Fallout didn't have the fancy graphics and fluid gameplay that exist today, the premise was the same. You controlled a person who is trying to survive a post-apocalyptic wasteland. If you've played the new games, you'll recognize some factions such as the Brotherhood of Steel and features like the Pip-Boy.

    As you'll notice in your playthrough, many features from the first game have survived for over 20 years.

    You can get Fallout on gog.com or on Steam. Its 1998 sequel is pretty great too.

    304 votes
  • Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge
    Photo: LucasArts

    The first Monkey Island game was one of the most popular creations of LucasArts outside the Star Wars universe. However, with the second game, they made significant improvements that made it an even bigger hit than the original.

    The adventure classic's storyline focuses on the pirate LeChuck being resurrected as a zombie after the events of the first game. That's right, Pirates of the Caribbean wasn't the first franchise to feature undead pirates.

    An updated 2010 special edition is available on gog.com and on Steam.

    304 votes
  • 11
    296 VOTES
    Civilization II
    Photo: Firaxis

    Civilization is a franchise that continues to make advancements and improve the player experience. There are currently six editions of the game, but the second edition is still a standout; it was immediately recognized as an improvement over its predecessor in almost every way. If you've only played the newer games, the graphics here will look decidedly unimpressive, but you'll notice the core mechanics are quite similar.

    End-game pollution cleanup can be a bit tiresome, but mostly the game has a zippy pace, and the constant bombardment of decisions gives Civ II a classic "just one more turn" feel. Plus, the inspiring "Wonder" mini-movies have not been topped.

    Unfortunately, it's not an easy game to find these days. There are still some box copies floating around, but it might take some tweaking to run on Windows 10 systems.

    296 votes
  • 12
    358 VOTES

    Once in a while, a game design comes along that is so perfect, so sui generis, that it transcends both time and genre. One such game was Tetris. Here's another.

    Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to shepherd a not-very-bright collection of adorable creatures who insist on walking forward obliviously no matter what is in front of them. Using special Lemmings with certain skills (climbers, diggers, etc.), you must clear the way to safety. The game was a monster hit in its day, and those interested in gaming history should read Jimmy Maher's fascinating blog entry on its origins.

    Unfortunately, there's no easy place to buy the original PC version of Lemmings at the moment, though it seems possible to chase down old copies on Amazon. People are definitely asking for a gog.com release, so, fingers crossed.

    358 votes
  • Heroes of Might and Magic II
    Photo: Ubisoft

    Some games just achieve a kind of alchemy - all the parts fit together and are perfectly of their time. Heroes of Might and Magic II is just such a game. The charming pixel graphics, executed with a sophistication belying their surface naivete; the trilling fairy-tale music; the evocation of a high-fantasy world in which a colorful landscape is dotted with treasures and mysteries begging to be investigated - it all flows together seamlessly.

    Tactical combat presents an intriguing range of challenges as you learn the strengths and weakness of various unit types, from modest halflings and pixies to awe-inspiring titans and black dragons. There were many subsequent HOMM titles, and some are considered superior, but II has a unique, indescribable charm.

    You can buy HOMM II on gog.com.

    263 votes
  • 14
    241 VOTES
    Unreal
    Photo: Epic

    Though not as acclaimed as Half-Life, the other big single-player FPS of 1998, Unreal continues to be an important game, and not just for the still-evolving tech it pioneered. Fondly (or not-so-fondly?) labeled "Myst with guns" for its emphasis on exploration through vast, atmospheric locales, Unreal is in fact one of the great exercises in FPS world-building.

    Its beautiful, mysterious planet of Na Pali, inhabited by peaceful denizens but beset by invasion from interstellar races, develops a real fascination. More perhaps than any other FPS, Unreal is a place you find yourself wanting to go back to. The music's fantastic, too.

    Get Unreal on Steam or on gog.com.

    241 votes
  • 15
    314 VOTES

    Myst is the best-selling adventure game of the '90s. Actually, it's the best-selling PC game of the '90s. The player starts with a magical book that they can use to hop through different worlds. As they travel from world to world, they must solve puzzles and find missing pages from the book to continue. The objective is to eventually save one of two brothers who are trapped inside another book.

    Alternatively, if you're feeling a little evil, you can leave them to rot in their prisons. The game's ray-traced 3D environments and strange, eerie atmosphere were like nothing '90s gamers had seen before.

    You can find Myst on gog.com. If you'd rather be able to move about its environments in real time, check out RealMyst.

    314 votes
  • 16
    252 VOTES

    Often, when people ask that old, tiresome question, "But are videogames art?" Grim Fandango gets trotted out as Exhibit A. Its beautifully production-designed world, which is like a '40s film noir crossed with a Dio De Los Muertos parade, is worthy of a Pixar movie, and its offbeat humor is a classic example of adventure designer Tim Schaffer's inimitable style.

    Some consider it the best game of 1998, which, when you consider the competition (Half-Life, Starcraft, Baldur's Gate, just for starters), is a heck of a compliment.

    You can find the excellent remaster of Grim Fandango on gog.com and on Steam.

    252 votes
  • Twenty-plus years on, Thief: The Dark Project remains the definitive stealth game. Its graphics haven't aged well, but everything else has. The sound design holds up beautifully, the gameplay can be as violent or nonviolent as you like (true experts prefer "ghosting" their way through a level without even knocking guards unconscious), and creeping past moaning zombies can be an unbearably tense experience.

    Add to the mix sprawling nonlinear levels, evocatively moody cutscenes, and an imaginative steampunk world, and you've got a straight-up classic.

    Thief and its sequels (also worthwhile) are available on gog.com and on Steam.

    217 votes
  • Star Wars: Dark Forces
    Photo: LucasArts

    In the 90s, many first-person shooters tried to replicate the success of DoomStar Wars: Dark Forces took the genre to a new level as it introduced new mechanics such as jumping, crouching, and looking up and down. It might seem strange to hear that these mechanics didn't exist before, but they were revolutionary at the time.

    Additionally, if you're a fan of the Star Wars expanded universe, you'll notice that some of the story points that exist in this game make their way into the expanded universe in later years. Sadly, the critical role played by its hero Kyle Katarn in securing the Death Star plans was overwritten by Rogue One. We still love you, Kyle!

    Dark Forces can be bought on gog.com and on Steam.

    232 votes
  • The even-better followup to the already-classic Dark Forces, Jedi Knight brings the franchise into the post-Quake era with fully-3D, mouselook-enabled action. The game takes full advantage of the new tech; while the graphics look poor now, the massive, vertiginous level designs have arguably never been surpassed.

    Lightsaber combat and potent Force Powers are just icing on the cake. The cutscenes, a relic of the '90s FMV video fad, are on the cheesy side, but actually pretty decent compared to much of what was being produced for games in those days.

    Find Jedi Knight on Steam and on gog.com.

    229 votes
  • Day of the Tentacle
    Photo: LucasArts

    Day of the Tentacle is a sequel to 1987s Maniac Mansion, the game which pioneered the "SCUMM" style of graphical adventure interface. In this point-and-click adventure, you switch among three characters as they mess around with a time machine.

    Unfortunately for them, the time machine is faulty, and they're soon separated. It's your job to shepherd them through wacky adventures as they try to reunite.

    A remastered edition is available on gog.com and on Steam.

    221 votes
  • Everyone loves a good Star Wars game, and Star Wars: TIE Fighter was one of the first on the PC, and its unique premise - putting you to work for the bad guys - made it an instant standout. It is known in the video game community as one of the best space-combat simulators ever made.

    The energy system is configured so that players can't have everything running on full power at once. As a result, players must decide whether to put their energy into shields, engines, or weapons. Each has a pro and a con, so different strategies are required for different battles.

    You can purchase TIE Fighter on Steam and on gog.com.

    196 votes
  • Most first-person shooters take place in realistic or futuristic environments. But Hexen takes the first-person genre to a fantasy world. Once you choose from three classes, you will be released into a world of magic and danger, fighting your way through multiple levels before the final boss encounter.

    Although the game might not look great today, there are several mods you can use to improve the graphics. With mods to improve the graphics, the game still holds up fairly well mechanically.

    Hexen: Beyond Heretic is available for purchase on Steam.

    208 votes
  • X-Com: UFO Defense
    Photo: 2K

    X-Com hadn't been out for long before it started climbing to the top tier of "best PC game of all time" lists. More than a quarter-century later, it remains the gold standard for tactical combat games, the bar against which everything else is measured.

    Its tale of a global defense team tasked with heading off an extraterrestrial invasion featured incredibly tense small-scale combat, given meaning and context by a persistent strategic wrapper.

    You can find it on gog.com and on Steam.

    233 votes
  • Planescape: Torment
    Photo: Beamdog

    The second CRPG made with the now-legendary Infinity Engine, Planescape Torment released with somewhat less fanfare than its predecessor Baldur's Gate, but it has since developed a reputation as almost the platonic ideal of good RPG writing. You play the Nameless One, a restless wanderer who is blessed (or cursed?) with the ability to rise from the dead again and again.

    As you quest for information about your origins against the wildly imaginative backdrop of Sigil, the City of Doors, you are joined by an eccentric band of traveling companions, including a bad-tempered thief with a flicking tail and an Irish brogue, and a wisecracking floating skull. Many consider PS:T the best CRPG ever made, full stop.

    You can get it on gog.com or on Steam.

    163 votes
  • Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee
    Photo: Oddworld Inhabitants

    Everyone loves a good prison break, and that's exactly what you get in Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee. However, it isn't your typical prison break. Instead, you'll be escaping from a meat processing plant that is grinding up the local species into treats for aliens. You will try to save has many slaves as possible.

    You need to do as well as you can because the ending is affected by the number of slaves you save.

    You can find Oddworld on Steam and on gog.com.

    217 votes
  • 26
    150 VOTES

    While most real-time strategy games were limiting themselves to a 2D map, Homeworld boldly leapt into the third dimension, imagining what combat might be like in the emptiness of space, where craft can move up and down as easily as left and right.

    The distinctive gameplay is complemented by wonderfully atmospheric visuals and music. No other game, RTS or otherwise, feels like Homeworld.

    The tastefully remastered 2015 version is available on gog.com and on Steam.

    150 votes
  • 27
    150 VOTES

    Master of Orion is the first true space 4X game, and arguably still the best. Its ultra-streamlined interface, the result of exhaustive playtesting, makes it a pleasure even by modern standards, and the graphics, while dated, retain their pixel-art charm. MOO 2 was beloved by many, and MOO 3 was a famous fiasco, but the original MOO abides.

    You can get Master of Orion on Steam or on gog.com.

    150 votes
  • Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri
    Photo: Firaxis/EA

    In Civilization, once you build your spacecraft and head for the stars, your problems are over. In Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri, they've just begun. You'll have to contend with colonists of other factions, as well as the organisms of a strange and hostile world, if you want to secure your civilization's future beyond its terrestrial cradle. Many still consider Alpha Centauri the apex of the 4X strategy genre.

    You can buy it on gog.com.

    166 votes
  • 29
    135 VOTES

    The first Star Control was a fun head-to-head space-combat game, descended from the original Space War, that had a rather perfunctory strategic wrapper. The second game was vastly more ambitious, building upon its predecessor's core to create a galaxy-spanning adventure in which you sought to free Earth from domination by the malevolent, caterpillar-like Ur-Quan.

    Almost universally beloved, Star Control II retains a place in its fans' hearts as one of the very best computer games ever made.

    You can get Star Control II (with the first game bundled for good measure) on gog.com and on Steam.

    135 votes
  • There were a lot of cyberpunk games coming out in the mid-'90s, but a lot of them were dour and pretentiously self-important. So it's like a breath of fresh air to see one that actually has a sense of humor. Beneath a Steel Sky brings a Douglas Adams-esque tongue-in-cheek wit to its dystopian world.

    Its point-and-click puzzle gameplay is definitely tailored for adventure aficionados, so be prepared for a little frustration if you aren't a genre maven. An added bonus is that the game's cutscene artwork is done by Dave "Watchmen" Gibbons.

    Best of all, it's totally free!

    126 votes