
Player 2 continues its look back at the current-gen with Deputy Editor Paul Games listing his three personal generation-defining games.
Alanah Pearce, who was a writer at Sony Santa Monica for several years and worked on God of War Ragnarök, has shed more light on the sex minigames which cropped up in the series' earlier entries.
Other than looking like that, why does anyone care about what she has to say about anything?

Kratos’ story in the God of War series now spans more than twenty years of video games. Throughout that time, the character has appeared across different eras

NateTheHate says the next God of War game will star Faye, feature action focused gameplay, and aim for a 2027 launch.
So let me get this right Corey said he didn’t want to spend 15 years of his life on the one franchise and decided to do a new IP which is why he didn’t do Ragnarok…but his new game is now a God of War prequel about a character who’s dead using Norse mythology.
I don’t get it, I thought it would be a brand new IP
So they were suppose to be working on s New AAA IP something in the scifi genre. Did that get scrapped? They pulled back on LS and refocusing on the platform. Does that also mean less risks in the AAA space and going back to the same ip
If it’s fun with a good story I am fine with it. Definitely unexpected but that could end up being a good thing. Only time will tell.
Monster Hunter "became one of the most important games of a generation."
I enjoyed it a lot and definitely consider it a great game, but this feels strong to me
God of War
Bloodborne
Astrobot
I didn't play every game this gen, but these 3 wowed me
I feel like “defining” a gen means it set a standard that was looked to imitate. I feel Bloodborne set a way higher precedent then MH. As it is still championed for its achievements.
I’m not a fan of the Witcher games but it’s pretty undeniable it’s success and I’m sure people will talk about it well into next gen.
God of War was truly mesmerizing and showed an amazing level of quality from an over the shoulder action game. With amazing game detail and lore that thinking about it still feels like I relive its amazing design and story choices. Definitely one of the most impactful games for me this gen especially as a father. I still call my sons by screaming Boy(s)
This gen was defined by battle royales, loot boxes, GaaS, battle passes, streaming & microtransactions. We spent more time talking about those things in specific games than the actual game itself.
With that said...
Fortnite
Destiny
All the Souls clones (which didn't start this gen)
Look at it this way. What game got more attention, was talked about more, streamed more, etc... The Witcher 3 or Fortnite?
I would have to include TLOU2 on this. That game looked next gen