Lately, a couple of lists have been speeding through the tubes of the intertron, reminding new Wii-owners that in fact, your new system has all the functionality of one recently passed away: the Nintendo Gamecube. As such, the library of playable games from launch is actually quite large. But how is one to discern the hidden gems amongst such a vast field? Worry not, fair readers: we're here to help.Let's be fair: you're here reading Nintendo Wii Fanboy, for goodness' sake, so you probably know about absolute wonders such as Super Smash Bros Melee, Metroid Prime, and The Legend of Zelda: Wind Waker. These games, of course, must be played under penalty of death. What follows are fifteen fourteen of our personal recommendations, leading you from the AAA-released to barely known wonders of the little purple box. Most of these games can still be found, used, at many outlets nationwide. Take a look, and buy a game! We believe in you.
Jason Wishnov
1. F-Zero GX - My own personal list starts with an obvious choice. I'll just go ahead and say it: I think FZGX is the greatest racing game ever made. Period. The game is so lightning-fast, your brain quite literally has trouble processing the visual information during your first race. But, as you adjust the mind-numbing speed, you begin to realize the depth of strategy hidden within: the balance between boosting and life energy, the importance of attacking any of thirty competitors in an attempt to regain health, and the key differences between craft to appropriately tackle a specific track. Throw in an unimaginably difficult storyline, tons of modes, ridiculously designed gravity-defying courses, graphics that still trump essentially any Wii launch title, music that currently occupies thirteen slots in my iTunes library, and you've got yourself one hell of a game.
2. Tales of Symphonia - On a system notoriously devoid of RPG content, Tales of Symphonia is as good as it gets. The Tales series has always been renowned for its action-based "linear motion" battle system, and ToS successfully brought the system into 3-D with a multi-plane system. The story begins a little too candy-coated and clichéd, but thanks to some slick twists and more-than-decent voice acting (Tara Strong!), the story rises up to meet the gameplay in stride.
3. Super Monkey Ball 2 - The SMB franchise quickly became very popular thanks to its two first installments. Since then, various entries (Touch and Roll, SMB Adventure, and even Banana Blitz) haven't had quite the impact as the superlative second installment. The main game features 150 superbly designed levels and insane amounts of challenge (see my amazingly in-depth FAQ!), guaranteed to keep you
4. The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures - We know. The cost and complexity of setting up this game might be the highest in the history of video games, requiring (for the full experience), a Gamecube, a copy of the game, four Game Boy Advances, and four GC-to-GBA connection cables. This game was the final result of Nintendo's "connectivity" platform, and though the concept sputtered and died, this shining title emerged from the dreck. It's difficult to explain how a multiplayer game can at once be both competitive and cooperative, but Four Swords Adventures manages to pull it off. Sporting some truly inspired puzzle design (a la Zelda: A Link to the Past), players need to work together to defeat each area, and yet clamor and squabble for the resulting Force Gems scattered around each level. If you can manage the hardware (and really, three or four players is the way to go), this is an absolute must-buy.
5. Donkey Kong: Jungle Beat - Another oddity in required hardware, this platformer actually utilizes the bongos used in the rhythm game Donkey Konga as standard control. But what seems absolutely ridiculous becomes supremely awesome, as brilliant level design after brilliant level design forces players to use the limited control of the bongos in increasingly complex manners. And of course, me being a sucker for games with high difficulty, DK:JB never fails to disappoint. The requirements for unlocking the final worlds are absolutely brutal, but the sense of accomplishment is unmatched. Once again, if you can find a way to set it up, don't hesitate to purchase this oft-overlooked wonder.
David Hinkle
1. Eternal Darkness - Silicon Knights' previous game before working on a title that was nothing but mediocre at E3 (coughTooHumancough), this game is legitimately scary and fun, taking you through a bloodline in time and its ties to evil gods. Only for the mature, don't believe the game when it says your memory card is erased.
2. Beyond Good & Evil - One of the greatest adventure games ever made, which sadly did not sell nearly as much as it should have, needs to be played by any self-respecting gamer. We recommend the GameCube version, as the PS2 port is so buggy as to be unplayable and the Xbox port is so unavailable as to be frustrating. The GC port is a natural choice.
3 . Metal Gear Solid: Twin Snakes - While many argue the inclusion of first-person aiming makes this title so easy as to border on ridiculous, no one can argue that the story and characters in this game are among the best the industry has ever seen. Collecting dog tags and other extras give this game more lasting flavor than its original PSX version, offering even more goodness to the gamer.
4. Viewtiful Joe - Far better than its sequel, Joe's first outing in Movieland is a touch of 2D genius. With brilliant cel-shaded graphics and the ability to manipulate time, Viewtiful Joe features excellent boss battles and environments inspired from movies such as Indiana Jones. It's a fantastically fun game.
5. Soul Calibur II - Sure, later versions of Soul Calibur feature gameplay changes that take the franchise in a new direction than its second installment, but none of the more recent games allow you to play as Link. And, to us, that's the only thing that matters ...
Alisha Karabinus
1. Resident Evil 4 - I'm pretty sure my fellas above done lost their minds, because this is the GC title. If you only play one, ever, this should be that one. If you only have a few weeks to live, spend them playing this game, and your life shall not have been in vain. My penchant for drama aside, RE4 seemed to me to be the ultimate in the RE series, and it doesn't even have the franchise-affirming zombies! Also, it can, at times, make large, beefy men squeal like girls. From the graphics to the challenging gameplay to moments of pure, undistilled awesome, this was the game that made me feel justified for hanging on to my poor GameCube while everyone ragged on me through the years.
2. Eternal Darkness - I'm repeating Dave's pick here because it simply has to be repeated. I would eat babies for a sequel to this (if it was just as good or better). While the graphics might, at first glance, leave a little something to be desired (it was originally to be for the N64), it didn't matter, because absolutely everything else was fantastic. And if you were lucky, all those graphics would warp out anyway, in new and terrifying ways. Stop reading this list and go play Eternal Darkness. Now. Go.
3. Animal Crossing - A world within a world that blossomed on screen per your actions, Animal Crossing offered the player a chance to take a town and do whatever they wanted. While the concept wasn't new, the use of the internal clock, synching game actions to real world time, offered a new and different level of interactivity ... and sometimes frustration, if you happen to be a night owl. Animal Crossing can give you a reason to get up in the morning!
4. Mario Golf: Toadstool Tour - If you'd told me five years ago that I'd be picking any golf game, ever, for anything, I would have laughed in your face. But this game, to me, is everything that multiplayer games should be. It's easy to pick up and hides a lot of depth beneath the cartoonish look, and it's genuinely fun to crowd onto the couch with your friends and play for hours. Golf in Wii Sports is interesting and all, but it's nothing next to this one.
5. Killer 7 - Grasshopper's games are an acquired taste, to be sure, but this is a singular game worth playing for the sheer weirdness of the experience. Suda 51's second title to make our staff recommendations, Killer 7 is hard to categorize. On on-rails shooter, a puzzle game, and a story that defies simple explanation combine to make a game that is like no other. Love it or hate it, Killer 7 is more than a game -- it's an experience worth having.













Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
1-05-2007 @ 5:29PM
Falk Ebert said...
Good Idea!
Reply
1-05-2007 @ 5:30PM
zenprism said...
I just picked up Paper Mario 2: The Thousand Year door and played it all up and over my Christmas vacation. It's a great Gamecube game that I hadn't ever played before. I recommend it to anyone who likes a lighthearted but challenging RPG experience.
I now hope Nintendo puts the N64 Paper Mario on the Virtual Console. As well as the SNES' Super Mario RPG.
Reply
1-05-2007 @ 5:43PM
CJC said...
Maybe not all AAA titles, but: Custom Robo, Harvest Moon:Magical Melody,Fire Emblem, Lost Kingdoms, The Baten Kaitos games, WarioWare, Pikmin 2, and probably a dozen or so other games I can't name off the top of my head are at the very least worth playing.
Reply
1-05-2007 @ 5:46PM
Josh said...
Five games in any order I can think of:
Naruto: Clash of Ninja 2
The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess
Tales of Symphonia
Skies of Arcadia Legends
Super Smash Bros. Melee
Reply
1-05-2007 @ 6:10PM
Mr. Khan said...
If I would recommend hidden GC gems
1. Super Mario Strikers (Best soccer action, bar none)
2. Sonic Gems Collection (all the obscure Sonic greats in one place, no way you should miss this)
3. I must repeat the claim for F-Zero GX
4. Starfox Assault (rich blend of Arcade-esque action along with peculiar StarFox story)
Reply
1-05-2007 @ 6:16PM
af said...
Paper Mario: The Thousand Year Door is one of the best Gamecube games I've played (besides Super Smash Bros.)
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1-05-2007 @ 6:17PM
RDX said...
Far and above anything else stands Melee. My friends and I played that game damn near every weekend for 5 solid years. Best multi-player ever. Thousand Year Door is also one of my favorite Gamecube games.
And Eternal Darkness....so....incredibly....awesome...
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1-05-2007 @ 6:26PM
Alisha Karabinus said...
Melee is what multiplayer games should be.
Though now that Dave mentioned SCII, there's been a lot of inter-staff trash talk all of a sudden. Good times!
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1-05-2007 @ 6:47PM
The S said...
Tcha! Paper Mario 2 is one of the best games ever yet only on the cube. Here's my list:
1. Super Mario Sunshine
2. Zelda: The Wind Waker
3. Warioware
4. Beyond Good and Evil
5. Paper Mario 2
I also loved F-Zero, MK:DD and Luigi's Mansion
Reply
1-05-2007 @ 6:53PM
Addison said...
5.Mario Golf
4.Eternal Darkness: Sanity's Requiem
3.Metal Gear Solid: The Twin Snakes
2.Killer 7
1.Resident Evil 4
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1-05-2007 @ 7:06PM
Wayne said...
I wouldn't trust anyone who recommends Super Monket Ball 2 over the original.
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1-05-2007 @ 7:14PM
Jason Wishnov said...
Right you are, Wayne. In fact, I stole twenty bucks from your wallet when you weren't looking.
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1-05-2007 @ 7:53PM
littlewii said...
I am one that was busy in life and never got around to getting a Gamecube (only Nintendo machine I don't own). Now that I have the Wii, I have been looking and buying games I have missed. Keep these sort of posts coming for us that missed a generation!
Reply
1-05-2007 @ 7:54PM
Canti said...
Fantastic games you missed:
Metroid Prime
Starfox Adventures
Super Mario Sunshine
Mario Power Tennis
Mario Kart: Double Dash!!
Metroid Prime 2: Echoes
Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance
Geist
Viewtiful Joe 2
Pikmin
Pikmin 2
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1-05-2007 @ 8:10PM
timcat said...
Ikaruga!
seriously go buy it.
Its the kind of game that tears your heart out and then pees in the wound, laughing at you the entire time but I live it!
Reply
1-05-2007 @ 8:15PM
Comstock said...
I gotta second Ikaruga, one of the most beautiful games I have ever seen.
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1-05-2007 @ 8:20PM
dingi said...
I think the most fulfilling game i have ever played and completed on the cube must be metroid prime...just wow!!! :)
Off the top of my head couple of games that were missed...
Tony Hawk Pro Skater 3 - which is still the best in the series.
Ikaruga - simply amazing
and for the only football experience worth touching on the cube is winning eleven soccer 6 which u can import and play with freeloader or something. Menus might be in japanese, but it still offers one of the best winning eleven experiences :)
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1-05-2007 @ 8:23PM
Scott said...
I third Ikaruga. it rocks
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1-05-2007 @ 8:26PM
Sam said...
I went to no less than 10 stores before I found Beyond Good and Evil, and it was definitely worth the search. I would also agree with Paper Mario: The Thousand Year Door, and offer Donkey Konga. Besides the fact that it is an amazing party game, GameStops are practically giving it away (I got the game and two bongos for $14.99).
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1-05-2007 @ 8:31PM
timcat said...
Im glad this question was asked.I kinda forgot how great Ikaruga is. I at one point was 57 on the Ikaruga points board but alas I was off that bored a mere 8 hours later. It is really intense!
I have a found obsession with alien humanoid also. I know thats cross platform but I have it on cube.
Most of my other favorites are on this list already.
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1-05-2007 @ 8:43PM
Jason Wishnov said...
I was considering Ikaruga, but I decided against it since it was actually a port of a Dreamcast game. Still, it does indeed rock.
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1-05-2007 @ 9:46PM
timcat said...
Port or no port it is amazing. I like games like rtype and life force. I can play in short intervuls ( which life right now demands) and Ikaruga is even better with its scoring system and slow mo training mode. its really addictive if you are into the genre. Gunstar heros is great too , same developers. I know thats no a gube game just thought Id plug it cause it rocks!
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1-05-2007 @ 11:35PM
Lemm said...
Fourth vote for Ikaruga!
Despite being a dreamcast port, ikaruga is an absolutly astounding top-down shooter. If you're a fan of the genre, enjoy hard games, or want a game for under $20, look no where else.
Reply
1-05-2007 @ 11:56PM
jim said...
RE4 is not only my favorite game on the gamecube, but my favorite game of all time!!! Seriously I played that game every day for about 5 months. I finsihed it on every difficulty and unlocked and upgraded everything including the hand cannon and all the bottlecaps!!!!! BEST GAME EVER!!!!
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1-06-2007 @ 12:44AM
Grimey said...
I just want to toss Gladius into the discussion as a little-known, awesome turn-based squad-level strategy/rpg.
Gladiatorial combat in an ancient quasi-Rome that includes historical and mythical units, as well as quasi-Norse and quasi-Arabian chapters. My favorite game that I played on GC, and I played it a hell of a lot.
You can probably pick it up for a song -- I got it for $12 at Sam's club 3 years ago.
If you like turn-based strategy, you know it's hard to come by, especially done well, and in Gladius it is.
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1-06-2007 @ 1:53AM
Matt said...
And how could anyone forget "The Legend of Zelda: Collector's Edition?!!!" Even though it is a collection of N64 games, and the two original Zelda games, they are all some of the BEST games ever made (at least in my opinion.) Four AMAZING games in one, plus some other kool little features, like a Windwaker Demo, and a Zelda timeline. It's a promotional disk, so technically not a real game, but I don't own anything comparable, except maybe Ocarina of Time Masterquest (also a promotional Zelda game that came with Windwaker.) The Legend of Zelda Collector's Edition is rare, and if you find it, can be pretty expensive, but it's worth every penny, and should be searched for on ebay by anyone owning a Gamecube or a Wii!
Sorry, I just LOVE Zelda.
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1-06-2007 @ 6:29AM
Ianc02 said...
You know what is funny here guys, that people have critisized the Gamecube platform. Makes me laugh.......and cry......because amongst the cross-platform classics,people (zealots) have missed out on some class Nintendo exclusives. Tough luck on them i say. Another shout for Fire Emblem and Ikaruga, also Killer 7 - all fantastic.
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1-06-2007 @ 7:21AM
Foetoid said...
@17
I have to agree with the Ikaruga bit, but as far as Tony Hawk goes, you are on some nice crack son. I have finished every single Tony Hawk game every (except Downhill Jam on DS) and that includes Project 8. But i can say, without a doubt, that Tony Hawk Downhill Jam on the Wii is the best Tony Hawk game ever. I nearly took it back cause i had to get used to it, but when you do get used to it, the game is amazing!
Reply
1-06-2007 @ 9:56AM
Pieter Gorsira said...
Ikaruga is great, Killer 7 as well. I, for one, prefer Sega Soccer Slam over Super Mario Strikers any day.
Those lists are fantastic!
Speaking of Gamecube, what are you Wii owners doing with your Gamecube now that you have a Wii? Are you trading them in?
Reply
1-06-2007 @ 10:00AM
Nicolas said...
1- The legend of zelda: twilight princess
2- Resident evil 4
3- Metroid prime 1-2
4- Éternal darkness
...
Reply
1-06-2007 @ 6:54PM
murray b said...
i'm keeping my gamecube, as they'll only give you about 15 bucks for it. there are still some great games i dont have for it, even though i've almost got them all. thanks for the list i thought only metriod 2 and the midway collection 3 were the only ones left i really wanted, but i've just been told of some more must haves after i finish up twilight princess, since there are not many wii games i really want yet.
Reply
1-06-2007 @ 7:45PM
K said...
Where did you guys hide your Pikmin 1 & 2 recommendations? They're must-haves!!!!
Reply
1-07-2007 @ 3:34PM
Luigi193 said...
2. I just picked up Paper Mario 2: The Thousand Year door and played it all up and over my Christmas vacation. It's a great Gamecube game that I hadn't ever played before. I recommend it to anyone who likes a lighthearted but challenging RPG experience.
I now hope Nintendo puts the N64 Paper Mario on the Virtual Console. As well as the SNES' Super Mario RPG.
amen
Reply
1-08-2007 @ 4:38PM
Mike said...
Here is another list. It gives 20 great games with reviews for each game.
http://teenagefanboy.blogspot.com/2007/01/why-are-some-games-better-than-others.html
Reply
1-08-2007 @ 7:29PM
Mark A. Hill said...
I really can't see how anyone could have liked Killer 7 that much. I played the PS2 version and had absolutely no fun with it. It was weird just for the sake of being weird, and was simple and extremely shallow. Skip it.
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1-09-2007 @ 8:09PM
Huzzah!! said...
I suppose this list is good for people that never owned a Gamecube, but everyone that did has already played most of these "big" games. Unfortunately for you, I'd say about 90% of the people browsing this site have owned a gamecube.
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1-21-2007 @ 12:53AM
Toad said...
You forgot Baten Kaitos.... possibly the longest game on the cube
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1-31-2007 @ 7:15AM
fsuhunter said...
No love for Chibi Robo? Chibi Robo is the most underrated game ever. I liked it better than the pikman games.
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