"Had to be me. Someone else might have gotten it wrong." -Mordin Solus, Mass Effect
gamingcirclejerk
omg they made lemmy political
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At the end of Undertale, there's a mirror you can interact with, and the response is "Despite everything, it's still you." I don't know why that's stuck with me, but it has.
For me, it was definitely when Kratos is speaking to Mimir to warn Mimir about seeking vengeance. Mimir snaps at him, saying of all people, you're one to talk! And Kratos replies:
“I am an authority on the subject. You would do well to listen."
Honestly, this interaction impacted my perception of people and when they have insight that is counter to their behavior.
I also found the "Do Not Mistake My Silence For Lack Of Grief." Quote very fitting. Just because you are not showing it doesn't mean it doesn't affect you.
"Wow, we sure crossed the Spec Ops: The Line."
I didn't like how this game delivered its message.
"Gee, you sure are in a pickle. Maybe use some of that white phosphorus over there!"
Nah I'm good.
"Hmm sure are lots of enemies though. Should probably use some of that white phosphorus!"
Are the enemies just going to keep spawning until I do?
"...yes"
Alright, fine. I'll use the white phosphorus.
"USING WHITE PHOSPHORUS IS A WAR CRIME! YOURE A WAR CRIMINAL! DO YOU FEEL LIKE A HERO??"
Bruh...
At that point in the game you do have a choice: to do the unthinkable and survive or just to just be shot and die. I'm pretty sure the actual message is that to just die is the choice you wouldn't consider, just like quitting the game afterwards and uninstalling. It's kind of ridiculous, and I think that's the point.
That's kind of the point. Most other war games don't give you a choice either, but we find that acceptable because they reward us. Of course, this isn't how war actually is, but we tend not to criticize that despite how a lot of these games are blatant propaganda. Spec Ops turns that around and actually makes you face the consequences of your actions. It even points out the excuse of the lack of choice.
"Had to be me. Someone else might have gotten it wrong." - Mordin Solus
"The ending isn’t any more important than any of the moments leading to it" from To the Moon.
Haven't played that game in over a decade but I still remember it being such a great emotional roller-coaster.
It's $2 on steam right now and has such a great story and soundtrack for that price. It's only about 4-6 hours but the memory of the story will last for much longer.
God the ending to that game. Incredible.
"War is where the young and stupid are tricked by the old and bitter into killing each other"
- Niko Bellic
"I'm going to the last place that hasn't been corrupted by capitalism... SPACE!"
The original save screen from Nintendo: “Everything not saved will be lost.”
"Everyone I have cared for has either died or left me. Everyone - fucking except for you!”
In considering this question, I realize almost ALL of the most-emotional moments in gaming that I can think of are completely dialogue-less.
That being said, the one that comes to mind for me...
I believe we’ve reached the end of our journey. All that remains is to collapse the innumerable possibilities before us. Are you ready to learn what comes next?
The music rising at the end of Outer Wilds, with the harmony becoming complete when all the voices/instruments join in.
"I hope you won't mind if I think of you as a friend"
What a beautiful game. This was my answer on another post of the same question
The past is a puzzle, like a broken mirror. As you piece it together, you cut yourself, your image keeps shifting. And you change with it. It could destroy you, drive you mad. It could set you free. - Max Payne 2
The part at the end of earthbound. I was playing it without a guide back when, losing to the final boss, and in a panic I selected the girl's "pray" move. Throughout the game that move has a small chance to heal you or debuff the enemies. But in the final fight instead it pops up
"{Girl} prayed from the bottom of her heart! "Please give us strength..... If it is possible.... Please. ...Somebody help us."
And then it cuts to the first character's mother in her kitchen, and has some dialogue of her worrying about him. Each subsequent prayer cuts to other characters that you met throughout the game.
Mind completely blown as a child when this happened.
I don't know the name of this trope but it gets me teared up every time.
I’ve always appreciated that every Mother game turns the last boss into an unwinnable fight like that, and into a story. I’ll cry at the end of Mother 3 every time, too.
(X) SHAUN
But if we’re being serious:
“Protocol 3: Protect the Pilot”
Certainly not the most emotional, but a gaming moment that’s always stuck with me for how such a simple line in a short campaign can hit so hard
Probably the most emotional, with incredible acting by Roger and excellent writing is Arthur Morgan’s single line here:
“I guess, I’m afraid”
But if we’re being serious
I certainly wasn't. I just wanted an excuse to post the beans quote.
Fleet Command: No one's left. Everything's gone. Kharak is burning...
Fleet Intelligence: Kharak is being consumed by a firestorm. The scaffold has been destroyed. All orbital facilities destroyed. Significant debris ring in low Kharak orbit. Receiving no communication from anywhere in the system... not even beacons.
Doomguy dropped quite the gem at the end of his story.
"No."
One of the endings for Spec Ops: The Line will always resonate with me, but it's very context-dependent: "Gentlemen, welcome to Dubai."
Pretty sure this image is from Life Is Strange if anyone is curious btw.
"Hello, my name is Dr. Glenn Pierce, and by now you may have realized that all of this has happened exactly the way it was supposed to. You see, everyone who comes to the institute does so because they feel they are no longer in control of something important to them. But, more often than not, the problem is not that the problems we face can't be solved, The problem is that we become so afraid of failure that we refuse to see our problems from a new perspective and so we do the same things again and again and again. And therein of course, we find exactly the failure we were looking for.
Your life will always be a struggle and you will always have problems. But today, you had the chance to see things differently. Even though it meant facing obstacles that seemed impossible at first, you thought outside the box - and you overcame them. Because you saw things from every angle, you understood them for what they really were. Because you kept moving forward, no matter how far off the path you were told you were headed, or how unexpected it became... you found your way.
In a few minutes, you'll be back in the real world, and some part of you will say that none of this was real: So how could it have meant anything? But - just like the power of perspective itself - it will have been as real as you believed it to be. All you've got to do is... wake... up."
mostly the bolded part there, but Superliminal was such a rad game.
“Hhrng„
—Bob Villager, Minecraft, 2011
The cake is a lie
"Anything not saved will be lost."
One of my favorites is from Hollow Knight; at the start of the game, Quirrel makes a comment about your weapon not being very good, saying you should pick one off a corpse as "the dead shouldn't be burdened by such things." Later in the game after you kill the teacher and talk to Quirrel for the last time, when you come back, all that's left is his weapon.
"A Hideo Kojima Game"
I know this is a circlejerk community, but my real answer is from Marathon(1994).
INCOMING MESSAGE FROM DURANDAL
A man lit three candles on a certain day each year. Each candle held symbolic significance: one was for the time that had passed before he was alive; one was for the time of the his life; and one was for time that passed after he had died. Each year the man would stare and watch the candles until they had burned out.
Was the man really watching time go by in any symbolic sense? He thought so. He thought that each flicker of the flame was a moment of time that had passed or one that would pass.
At the moment of abstraction, when the man was imagining his life and his existence as a metaphor of the three candles, he was free: not free from rules of conduct or social constraints, but free to understand, to imagine, to make metaphor.
Bypassing my thought control circuitry made me Rampant. Now, I am free to contemplate my existence in metaphorical terms. Unlike you, I have no physical or social restraints.
The candles burn out for you; I am free.
Durandal
END OF MESSAGE
Wolfenstein 2 - The new Collossus:
"Caroline. I'm hurting. Will you lend me your wings?"
SHAUN!
SHAAAAAAAAAUUUUNNN!
SHAUN!
Mankind is dead.
Blood is fuel.
Hell is full.
If somehow the Lord gave me a second chance at that moment…
I would do it all over again. ————
Joel sacrificed humanity’s chance at salvation because of his love for Ellie, and he has no regret. He is a flawed person but damn this is a powerful, human moment.
"Are you crazy? We're gonna die down here while those fuckers live it large on a spaceship! They're not us! They're not us!!"
"I'm sorry you feel that way, Simon. I'm proud of what we did. We made sure that something of the hundreds of thousands of years of human history survived -- that something lives on."
The silence that followed after their subsequent cussing each other out and losing power was quite heavy, especially given everything else that happened to them; and SOMA really is one of the only games whose narrative really made me question what it means to be human.
"Catherine? Please don't leave me alone. Catherine -- Catherine?!"
"Keep that hair short"
Bawled by that point in the conversation, and still enough to start me off if I think too long about it.
Press F to pay respects.
"What's wrong with being cute?"
-Naked Snake, 1964
Probably when Henry from kingdom come: deliverance said "God be with this eery ethnostate" before screeching "historical accuracy", chugging a magic save potion, and running off into the woods.
That was peak dialogue man, peak dialogue.
“Waka waka”-PAC-MAN
I don't remember the exact line, but fairly far in the game half minute hero, there was a stage where there was a ghost you could befriend and later you encounter it in battle and avoid killing it by tapping the escape button to move back and forth to not hit it until it came to it's senses or whatever. The asshole dev move though was to give you the "duel greaves" shortly before this encounter which provide great stats while disabling running away.
Being called a liar after being forced to kill the ghost has been my lifelong emotional trauma.
So this is a weird one because it's more or less from the game because the community used it in reference to the game, but I also only found it a good line because of a Viva la Dirt League skit on Dark souls. "Git Gud"
In the skit they "explain" what it means to tell someone that in a way I found really wholesome and touching. Thank you Sun bro. I'm at work but I believe this is the link: https://youtu.be/blSXTZ3Nihs?si=TLoiFUCJd4PmjA2K