ScrewAttack looks at one of the most popular games of the 90's, Quake has it's stamp all over games of today.

Fanatical has launched its new Explosive bundle, and this one can help you save big on a collection of Steam Deck-compatible titles.
triverse writes, "When you think of demakes you probably think of newer games on older hardware. Probably because that is how they occur more often. Another type of demake is made for the same platform just a different graphics style (many remakes offer this option at the flick of a button). What if I told you someone made Quake, but it is only 13 kilobytes in size. For comparison that is about one quarter the size of the original Super Mario Bros on the Nintendo Entertainment System. The kicker is, this version of Quake looks amazing, and everything explodes into gibs everywhere."

Have you ever looked at a modern first-person shooter and wondered "How did we get here?" Wealth of Geeks performs a deep dive into the genre, including some of the most influential games, from the very first FPS from the cross-genre experiences that changed the game entirely.
Quake is one of the most heralded franchises of the 90's. Infact, the sad part is Quake 3: Arena was far and away more of a complete and superior online title than Halo 2 which was released several years later. The Sega Dreamcast version of Quake 3 provided cross platform play with PC and Dreamcast, something you do not see in current consoles today.
$niper
I still play the original Quake about once a month. The graphics have aged quite a bit, but the gameplay's still solid.
If you haven't tried the older Quake games, there was an XP-compatible triple-pack containing Q1-3 released a couple of years ago.
shadowrun sucked big time. Sucked real big time. Its no wonder sniper hasn't heard of it. It was forgotten right after its miserable release on the 360, because it sucked so badly. sucked sucked sucked. Who would even mention Shadowrun, but a microslave.