
Vince from Awesome Games writes: 'So much of our gaming time requires us to shoot, slice, hit or use other forms of violence to progress. And it’s a lot of fun, which is why we keep coming back to these types of games time and time again. But there’s been a rising trend of games where the goal is pretty much the opposite, games that want you to empathise with characters rather than hurt them.'

About halfway through Numinous Games’ That Dragon, Cancer, the player finds themselves in a small hospital room.

Stop (or profit off) your border's contraband!

BLG writes: "Dystopian games are more relevant than ever in a day and age when the world seems to be getting progressively bleaker with each passing year. But dystopian fiction, in general, isn’t trying to make us depressed by showing us how much worse things could get. Rather, the point is (usually) to serve as a cautionary tale, and there’s perhaps no tale more cautionary than George Orwell’s 1984."
A game that should absolutely be on this list is Disco Elysium. That game is wildly deep in the field of its take on social issues, politics, religion, morality, and the internal struggles of the human psyche.
I love dystopian settings in general. We happy few is an excellent game. It is basically a mash up of 1984 and the other dystopian classic Brave New World. The drug 'Joy' is essentially 'Soma' from Aldous Huxley's novel.
Orwell was surprisingly engrossing. I enjoyed it quite a bit more than I expected. I bought the sequel on Steam but haven't gotten around to playing it yet.
Don't need a game to experience Orwell. Real life follows it pretty well.