My Top Games for Stress Relief

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I have been escaping to video games more than anything while in quarantine, so I decided to put together a list of my favorite stress-relieving games. The list is in no order, but each game is effective at relieving stress in its own way. Maybe one of these will provide the same calm for you as it does for me ^_^.

• Flower

My PS3 background since 2009

Developer: thatgamecompany
Price: $4.99+
Platforms: PS4, iPhone, PC
Estimated Playthrough: 5+ hours

I originally played this when it was released on the PS3, and it still remains one of my favorite games for de-stressing. There are no puzzles to complete or enemies to fight, and you don’t need any kind of gaming skills to enjoy the experience. You are just a petal flowing in the wind spreading flowers. While that may sound incredibly boring to some, just give it a try. The beautiful landscapes that you travel through and heart-touching soundtrack will melt all of your worries away.

• Story of Seasons: Trio of Towns

Yes, this is a picture of the front game case

Developer: Marvelous
Price: $27.99 +
Platforms: 3DS
Estimated Playthrough: 150+ hours

I hope that you still have your 3DS handy, because now is the time to break it out. Story of Seasons is the spiritual successor to the Harvest Moon franchise, aka the best farming simulator series ever. Once again, this kind of game may sound boring, but you won’t be saying that once the addiction sets in. Date, plant crops, raise animals, build, design, forage, craft, I could go on. In Trio of Towns, you are able to visit a lush tropical town, a western desert town, and a peaceful oriental town. With so many activities and places to visit, you may forget why you were stressed in the first place.

• Sky: Children of the Light

The first friend I made in Sky: Children of Light

Developer: thatgamecompany
Price: Free+
Platforms: iPhone; Coming to Android, Mac, PC, Switch
Estimated Playthrough: 5+ hours

If you notice, I have two games on my list from developer thatgamecompany. They are truly masters of stress-relief. However, there are more game mechanics in Sky: Children of Light. You have the mission of saving the stars, and can do it along with people all over the world. Other players can be seen in real-time throughout and you are able to hold their hands and…fly! The amazing floating mechanics from Flower are here, and soaring through tall clouds and over fields of flowers is surreal. The soundtrack makes you feel like you are at home in the sky, like a carefree bird.

• Animal Crossing: New Horizons

Taking a much needed stroll along the beach

Developer: Nintendo
Price: $59.99
Platforms: Switch
Estimated Playthrough: Infinite

I have only had New Horizons for about a week, and it is easily one of my favorite games of all time now. It also helps that it is great at relieving stress. You can chat with neighbors, go on a fishing trip, tend to your garden or redecorate. The simplicity of it all is very calming. If you get bored creating your own little adventures, you always have collections and missions to complete. If nothing else, do yourself a favor and at least go listen to a New Horizons playlist on YouTube.

• Super Smash Bros Ultimate

The battle possibilities are endless

Developer: Bandai Namco, Sora
Price: $54.99+
Platforms: Switch
Estimated Playthrough: Infinite

I have never been one to recommend the violence of some video games as a stress relief. I don’t really like to make that association because it paints a bad light on video games as a whole. However, there are certain ones that do it right and the Super Smash Bros series is one of them. The fact that it’s a fighting game pitting iconic and lovable characters against each other in a comic-style mischief way is why. You can punch, kick, throw and blast your opponents to your heart’s content. I don’t recommend playing pvp to relieve stress though. Just stick with cpu battles and set the difficulty below hard and you will be good to go.

198X Review

Role-Playing, Switch

Developer: Hi-Bit Studios
Price: $10
Platforms: Switch, PS4, Xbox One, PC
Reviewed for: Switch
Estimated playtime: 2-4 hours

Story

The Kid

Set sometime in 198X, you play as The Kid – a cynical but relatable high school boy who is desperate to escape his small town suburbia. We meet him at a time when he is experiencing the struggles of growing up that we all face, but he discovers a way to escape through his town’s basement arcade. The story follows The Kid’s daily life as he seeks more and more relief through the arcade. It’s a narrative that mirrors many of us that sought out games as a means to escape the confusing and often troubled reality of childhood. Even though I wasn’t around during the 80’s arcade era, the game’s dialogue does a great job of portraying all of us misunderstood gamer kids and is a nostalgic introspective experience. It hits hard.

Gameplay

My favorite of the arcade games: Shadowplay

This is where things get really interesting. While you play as The Kid, you don’t really control his character other than through the arcade games he plays. The gameplay breaks down into various minigames that call back to retro arcade classics. There’s the side scrolling fighter “The Beating Heart”, the space shooter “Out of the Void”, the racer “The Runway”, the ninja platformer “Shadowplay”, and the dungeon crawler “Kill Screen”. Each of these minigames has quality game mechanics that ring true to their inspiration. However, I call them “minigames” here for a reason. While they cover a broad selection of genres, they lack any real depth to them. Each only has about two short levels and no real difficulty wall. With the game only being comprised of five minigames with short cutscenes in-between, it only took me about three hours to beat. While I understand that this is only a $10 game, I wanted more from each level.

Graphics

Ahhh those polished pixels

198X brings the retro pixel style of the 80’s into the modern era. The cutscenes between gameplay are incredibly detailed, pulling me into the experience rather than taking me out. It really made me appreciate that art style and realize that I put too much emphasis on the hyper-realistic graphics of today. When gameplay switches to the arcade games, the quality barely seems to drop. Whether you’re looking at exploding spacecraft in “Out of the Void”, or racing down a fluorescent highway in “The Runway”, everything is gorgeous. The difference in art direction for each level is different, but cohesive.

Soundtrack

The chiptune soundtrack of 198X adds yet another layer of the retro gaming feel. During cutscenes where you listen to The Kid’s musings on life, the synthesizer’s beats are low and made me feel like soul-searching too. When you jump into a minigame though, the tone switches to match. Each track fits perfectly with its level. When I was frantically spinning around trying to avoid 20+ galactic fighter jets shooting at me all at once, the upbeat synth music added to the fun insanity. I usually find chiptune music to get annoying after a while, but even when I had to repeat “Shadowplay” a few too many times (apparently I can’t avoid shuriken well), I never got tired of the level’s track.


Overall Freeze Score

Pros:
Relatable and memorable story
Gorgeous pixel graphics
Catchy chiptune soundtrack

Cons:
Shallow depth of gameplay