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Games

These are Our Favorite Video Games of 2015 So Far

We're a third of the way through the year, so let's look back at the most outstanding (mostly new) games to have come our way.

This article originally appeared on VICE UK.

Three is the magic number, and of this we have long been sure. So, with that in mind and the end of April representing a solid third of 2015 gone, a bunch of VICE Gaming contributors have got together to list their favorite three titles of the year so far. Lots of other sites will wait until the end of June to run such a piece, but we say: Why delay when there's so much good out there right now to be playing?

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If you're the counting kind, you'll notice a "winner" amongst all of these fine selections. Take a bow, Bloodborne. Guess you're our game of the year so far.

Ed Smith / @mostsincerelyed

Resident Evil HD
Fascinating to see what's aged and what hasn't about 2002's Resident Evil. Still love that you have to burn the zombies' bodies—makes them seem genuinely dangerous. The "find this key to match this hole" puzzle and objective structure is very dry, though, and way too grounded to make the game seem surreal or frightening.

OlliOlli 2: Welcome to Olliwood
It's only very subtly different from its predecessor, but OlliOlli 2 still feels incredibly fresh. A great game to share with friends.

The Writer Will Do Something
Penned by video game scriptwriter Matthew S. Burns, this Twine game gives an inside look at the production meetings behind big games. There's a voyeuristic thrill to seeing behind the doors of an often secretive industry. It's a broad look at how stagnancy and disagreement can corrode any endeavor.

Dave Cook / @davescook

Bloodborne
Brutal, rewarding, and with an atmosphere so grim it makes Aberdeen town center look like paradise.

OlliOlli 2: Welcome to Olliwood
Already better than this year's Tony Hawk reboot because, well, it just will be. Roll7 owes me a replacement thumbstick for my DualShock 4.

DmC: Devil May Cry
Kudos to the devs for taking a solid 8/10 game everyone hated and making it a 9/10 game everyone still hates. People are funny…

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Cities: Skylines

Matt Porter / @Matt_Porter44

Cities: Skylines
Simply a fantastic city builder. Great mod support, and the boats sometimes do power slides over land. My game of the year so far.

Pillars of Eternity
Of all the attempts at bringing back the RPGs of old over the past couple of years, Pillars of Eternity is the deepest and the best.

Mortal Kombat X
Already the longest I've ever spent playing a fighting game, and there will be many more hours to come. Come at me, D'Vorah. [Read our interview with one of the game's developers.]

Titan Souls

Jonathan Beach / @jonothonbeech

The Evil Within: The Assignment / The Consequence
You really haven't lived until you've been hunted around a tiny, pitch-black server room by a bloodied, synthetic-voiced, one-hit-killing prostitute with a spotlight for a head, while the world's slowest elevator arrives.

Titan Souls
Enter the darkness. Hold your breath. Wipe your sweaty little hands on your jeans. Tense your bowstring. Pray, pray that it hits. Watch your pixelated arrow soar through the air. Feel the wave of satisfaction when it lands. Welcome to Titan Souls.

Bloodborne
This goes out to anyone who's stood watching the moonlight ripple off the silent lake in Byrgenwerth, thinking this is it, quietly wishing the dripping, Lovecraftian horror of Bloodborne would never end.

Axiom Verge

Carolyn Petit / @carolynmichelle

Bloodborne
I was worried that From Software's latest would feel too similar to the studio's Dark Souls games to carve out an identity of its own, but Bloodborne put those concerns to rest quickly. Like Dark Souls, Bloodborne serves up a world steeped in alluring mystery and a level of challenge that demands perseverance, but what makes this title special is the way that playing it feels like a slow descent into madness. It starts out operating in the familiar territory of Gothic horror but eventually confronts you with terrors you may not comprehend and, in the end, its entire narrative is left open to delicious interpretation. Which is why, like all the scariest nightmares, I can't seem to get it out of my head.

Axiom Verge
So many games have tried to walk in the footsteps of Metroid and Super Metroid, but Axiom Verge understands better than any other imitators how the level design and visuals and music of Samus Aran's early adventures all worked together to create a captivating cocktail of isolation and exploration. Not content to be a straightforward clone, though, Axiom Verge introduces elements that subvert our sense of its world's stability and suggest that the code that pieces it all together is shifting and alive.

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Life is Strange
We're only two episodes into Dontnod Entertainment's five-episode narrative-driven adventure game, but it's on track to be something special. I admit I cringe occasionally at the self-consciously overwrought teenspeak of the characters, but I'm more than willing to put up with some clumsy dialogue to spend time with Life is Strange, a game that's all about how time keeps slipping away, even for its time-rewinding protagonist Max Caulfield. With its golden sunlight and sensitive soundtrack, Life is Strange reminds you that sometimes it's possible to feel nostalgic for a moment even as it's happening, because you know it can't last forever.

La-Mulana EX

Steve Haske / @afraidtomerge

Bloodborne
If you've spent most of your time with the Souls series poking out from behind a greatshield, Bloodborne will seem especially bitchy at first brush. Then you learn the rhythm of the hunt is a fast, complementary dance that gets more and more thrilling with each nerve-jangling beast encounter. Then you die a lot more anyway. Bonus: The blood-sodden world of Yharnam is absolutely exquisite.

Resident Evil HD
Can I do this? Is it ok to pick REmake even though it technically came out 13 years ago? Fuck it, I don't care—survival horror's most iconic haunted mansion is as brilliant in HD as it ever was, and you should play it. That's all that needs to be said.

La-Mulana EX
If you've never even heard of La-Mulana regular let alone EX, just picture Indiana Jones in a sprawling and utterly merciless Metroidvania-styled ruin bursting with monsters, traps, and soul-crushingly arcane puzzles. (The EX just means there's new stuff over the original, and that it's on the Vita. Don't use a walkthrough.)

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Box Boy

Chris Schilling / @schillingc

Resident Evil Revelations 2
The best kind of episodic game, as far as I'm concerned—one where you don't have to wait ages for the next chapter. A schlocky horror show that embraces the series' sillier side, it's hardly high art, but this kept me royally entertained for a month.

Box Boy
A modest but stupendously well-designed puzzle game from the folks behind Kirby. Inventive and generous, it recognizes that a good puzzle doesn't have to be convoluted to satisfy, and its learning curve is beautifully judged.

Ziggurat
Hardly anyone seems to be talking about this fleet-footed first-person dungeon-crawler, which is a great shame—it's not doing much you haven't seen before, but it's bright, zingy, and surprisingly polished, and lets you lob magic grenades at sentient carrot-demons.

Andy Kelly / @ultrabrilliant

Pillars of Eternity
A big, deep fantasy adventure. Fun turn-based combat, brilliantly written dialogue, and a massive world to explore make it one of the best modern RPGs on PC.

Grand Theft Auto V
Specifically the PC version. Los Santos and Blaine County have never looked prettier, and the built-in video editor is insanely powerful. The best version of the best GTA.

Sunless Sea
A bizarre nautical survival RPG. Explore an underground sea filled with weird, vividly written stories and try not to get eaten by a giant eel.

Life is Strange

Brad Barrett (only picked two) / @artbaretta

Resident Evil Revelations 2
Currently exiled exclusively to PC for my next-gen fix, episodic gaming continues to get big after Telltale's successes. Having not played Resi anything since the fifth game proper (except for ten minutes of that sixth one, which was enough) RER2 has brought me the bite-sized fun I couldn't quite eke out of most previous titles. This is especially good for those of us unable, unfortunately, to plough through slow, plodding, intriguing adventures.

Life is Strange
More episodic excitement—this time from Square Enix, more known for their endless RPGs, or whatever. Obviously being an enthusiastic "SJW" (I guess), a young female character with the ability to rewind time and packing huge amounts of empathy is going to be my thing. It picks up speed quickly and the art is absorbing, with that gorgeous merge of realism that's seemingly splashed with a paintbrush.

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Dying Light

Matt Lees / @jam_sponge

Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate
I've toyed with the series in the past, but it never really grabbed me until this year. Ditching the underwater fighting guff and being more generous with players in terms of dishing out loot and providing a massive catalogue of beasts to hunt has made this 3DS exclusive an absolute joy to play. I've put about 100 hours in so far, and keep expecting to fire it up and find myself suddenly bored of playing. So far, it simply hasn't happened. Probably one of the best things I've ever played.

Bloodborne
After the disappointment of Dark Souls II, Bloodborne felt like a huge relief. But it isn't just a Dark Souls sequel by another name—Bloodborne clearly comes from the same DNA, but plays remarkably differently in practice. Switching fantasy for horror often makes the game feel harrowing rather than difficult, and while it lacks the crazy scope of customization and replay value that many have come to love from From Software's games, the result is something that feels slick, refined, and utterly thrilling—providing you're willing to embrace the aggression that the game is explicitly designed for. The initial few hours were tough to fully enjoy, but once you find the groove Bloodborne is a gore-caked beauty.

Dying Light
It's a mess that ends up relying too heavily on Dead Island's turgid melee weapon system, but elements of Dying Light reminded me strongly of some of my all-time favorite games. Free-running around a city overrun with zombies is the only part of the pitch that Dying Light needed, and when you're forced to rely on evasion and escape, it becomes an incredible thing. Before long you're just braining shit zombies with shit weapons for a parade of shit characters that never seems to end. A bargain bin gem with a triple-A price tag, but a bargain bin gem nonetheless.

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Bloodborne

Joe Donnelly / @deaco2000

Bloodborne
What to say about Bloodborne that hasn't been said already? Which has been, mostly, expletives. I spent the entire first day of my time with From Software's latest getting my ass kicked. And then it clicked. Bloodborne shows you its ropes by killing you at every turn. It's a slow process, but for every few hours of death, there's the euphoric 10–15 minutes of triumph and for some reason it's all worth it.

Titan Souls
Given how brilliantly realized each murderously difficult boss battle is, it's quite hard to believe that Titan Souls began life as a game jam entry. But it did, and it's brilliant. If Bloodborne is about gradually teaching by way of death, Titan Souls is about being thrust into the fires of hell to square-go the Grim Reaper.

Suikoden II
Sort of a cheat this one, given Suikoden II launched in the UK in the year 2000, but this millennium baby finally found its way to PSN for the first time earlier this year, so I reckon it counts. This is how RPGs used to be made, and quite frankly is how they should always be made. A tale of socio-political warfare, friendship, and betrayal: a true masterpiece and a must-own game some 15 years on.

Gravity Ghost

Jake Muncy / @jakemuncy

Dying Light
I've spent an inordinate amount of time so far this year with Dying Light. It gives you a big, breathing city, fills it with zombies, and tells you to run the hell away, and that blend of survival, parkour, and stealth is surprisingly engaging. The combat is rough, and I wish the game emphasized its survival game influences more, but this has become my go-to game for when I need to blow off some steam and run my legs out.

Bloodborne
The only other competitor for hours spent in my PS4 this year has been, naturally, Bloodborne. I'm as susceptible to From Software's garish charms as anyone, and they pulled off something remarkable this time by blending the Souls games' unique structure to combat that actually feels smooth, weighty, and satisfying. Combat is meaty, cruel, and addictive.

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Gravity Ghost
I'd also strongly recommend you check out Gravity Ghost, a very unique indie title you can pick up on Steam. In it, you control a mystical space girl while she floats in orbit around celestial bodies, guiding animal spirits to the afterlife. It's, uh, tricky to explain. But it's brilliant, and is the most distinctive and emotional thing I've played this year.

Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate

Keza MacDonald / @kezamacdonald

The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask 3D
I suspected that Majora's Mask might not seem as eerie or as clever this year as it did when I was 12, but I was dead wrong. It's strange, sad, and extraordinary, and if anything it's more unusual and vital now than ever.

Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate
Yes, everybody goes on about how challenging and rewarding and enormous Monster Hunter is, but you know what people never talk about? It's probably one of the funniest and most genuine games around. It cheers me right up.

Bloodborne
Every minute with Bloodborne is a minute in the company of something extraordinary. It gives me fucking terrible nightmares but I still don't want to stop playing it.

Mike—as in me, the person putting this piece together—picks Bloodborne, Alto's Adventure, and Life is Strange. Or maybe Majora's Mask 3D, or Titan Souls. I don't know. And you?