Never Ending Realm

Video game reviews, fan fiction, gaming news, and more! Since 2003. We especially love JRPGs, RPGs and the best of the rest. Never Ending Realm: Where your favorite games live forever!

Menu
  • News
    • PlayStation
    • Nintendo
    • Xbox
    • PC
    • Mobile
  • Fan Fiction
  • Opinion
    • Throwback Bit Thursday
    • Games Costing A Kidney
    • Thank God It’s Friday
  • Lists
  • Reviews
  • Humor
  • About
Menu
Chrono Trigger art

The 5 Most Replayable Single Player RPGs of All-Time (IMHO)

Posted on October 13, 2022October 13, 2022 by Samuel Rivera

Role-Playing Games are known for their epic stories, and convincing fantasy worlds. On this top five, I will try to list the RPGs that I have replayed the most over time.

These games are from different eras, and some might not be as replayable today, as some of the more modern games. However, these games are ranked in an “all-time” manner; meaning that they are here based on how much I played them in their heyday and beyond.

Because this is an opinionated list, it is a subjective one. You might disagree with it, and that’s fine; and quite expected. I tried to maintain a certain level of fairness based on the impact that each game had at the time of release.

For example, I played The Witcher 3 much more than I did Chrono Trigger, but I admit that Chrono Trigger was more revolutionary for the genre in 1995 than perhaps The Witcher 3 was in 2015 in terms of replay ability.

5. Final Fantasy VII

Cloud Snow Boarding Replayable RPGS
FFVII’s mini game shall never be confused with the N64’s 1080, but it was a decent mini game on its own.

Odd entry, I know. Typically, linear turn-based RPGs are not as free roaming, and as replayable as action open world ones. However, for its time, Final Fantasy VII was one of the most replayable and time consuming games in the industry.

Final Fantasy VII featured a cinematic 50 hour quest line, that was worth multiple playthroughs; if only to relive its (at the time) ground breaking cinematic cut scenes.

Beyond this, FFVII offered more content than previous Japanese RPG games by including many playable and replayable mini-games. Some of these were very elaborate. The game’s snowboarding 3-D game, while nowhere near as deep as say…Cool Boarders, did offer a degree of real entertainment value that wasn’t found in other JRPGs of the era.

Some of these mini games yielded substantial rewards. The chocobo racing game, for example, was key in getting a very powerful spell in the game.

If we add to all of the above, the addition of two optional characters with cool back stories and in game story content, you had one of the most enduring games of the PlayStation era.

Final Fantasy VII had more mini games than subsequent PS1 entries.

4. Chrono Trigger

Chrono Trigger fire

Chrono Trigger was Squaresoft’s SNES swan song. It was a game that used all of the aging system’s 16-bit resources, and brought in an interesting time traveling mechanic that aided the game in attaining its legendary reputation.

Chrono Trigger had a likable cast, and gave players the ability to tackle the game’s final boss right from the get go. Of course, without leveling up, and hours of play, beating the final boss wouldn’t have been possible at the start of the game.

Thankfully, CT’s time traveling mechanic is aided by a “new game plus” mode that allows players to replay the game over and over again, in hopes of attaining all 13 endings.

The above task, in 1995, was quite the feat and one that made Chrono Trigger one of the most replayable games of all time (up to that point). It is hard to argue against Chrono Trigger being one of the most replayable JRPGs of all time.

3. Dark Souls

Dark Souls

Ah, Dark Souls! Yes, other games within the series, including the recent Elden Ring might offer a longer play through, but in 2011, Dark Souls was a bit of a ground breaking beast.

Dark Souls’ run time is long enough; easily a 60-90 hour investment. However, the game’s new game plus mode gives the game near endless replayability. Dark Souls’ combination of polished and well thought out “Zelda like” world design along with its punitive combat, made an incredible experience at launch.

The game remains just as playable today, as it was 11 years ago. Dark Souls grips players and it never lets them go.

2. The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

Ocarina of Time Best games of 1998

Sure, there have been newer Zeldas that have been bigger and longer (Breath of the Wild), but in its time (no pun intended), Ocarina of Time was unrivaled in terms of side questing, optional fetch quests, and mini games.

I will not entertain the argument as to whether Ocarina is Action-RPG or not, I already made my case on the matter on another article. In my view, it is. Therefore, I can’t exclude the game from this list.

To say that Nintendo changed the way that open world RPGs, or open world games in general, would play after Ocarina of Time, is quite the understatement. With Ocarina of Time, Nintendo wrote the book that every other developer would follow to this day.

There was nothing quite as magical in 1998, and I must have sunk over 500 hours on my Golden cartridge. The mere act of riding a horse while traversing Hyrule’s Field was a groundbreaking experience. Never before had horse riding been made available in a game outside of horse racing simulators.

The freedom provided by Ocarina of Time was unrivaled in its heyday, and collecting heart pieces, and Skulltulas could take weeks without the help of a trusty guide. Finding secret grottoes and exploring everything nook and cranny of Zelda’s world had never been more fun.

I devoted more hours than I want to admit to mastering all of the game’s archery games, and even some of the game’s glitches. Ocarina’s fishing game could have been sold as a standalone title on its own.

In short, I have never spent more hours in a single video game (with the exception of our number one game on this list) than in Ocarina of Time. And, it was time well spent.

1. The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim

Skyrim Throwback

The biggest compliment that I can give Skyrim, is that I still boot up the game today (nearly 11 years after its original release) and still find that I am losing myself on its world for hours at a time.

Skyrim, in 2011, accomplished a feat that I thought would be impossible to top, at least for me. Skyrim gave the adult version of me, the same sense of scale and over all “anything is possible” feel that Ocarina had given a 13 year old me more than a decade earlier.

At this point I must have spent over 1000 hours in different versions of Skyrim, and I rarely play with mods, the game just has too much content, and too many quests (that seem to randomly pop up at times) for me to feel that I will ever get 100% completion.

The game’s expansions only added to what, in my opinion, remains the standard bearer for exploration, and world verticality in video games.

Sure, the game looks a bit dated at this point, despite Bethesda’s half assed efforts at remastering it. However, all in all, if there is a game that I would recommend to anyone looking for a single player “never ending” adventure, Skyrim will forever be the one choice.

Honorable Mentions

The Witcher 3, Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, Red Dead Redemption 2 (not necessarily a RPG, but my God! Is there content in that game), The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, Elden Ring, Horizon: Forbidden West.

Agree with the author? Couldn’t disagree more and are frothing at the mouth to tell him? Leave a comment here, on Facebook or send an email and make sure to follow Never Ending Realm on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube!

Category: Opinion
Tags: Action-RPG, Chrono Trigger, Dark Souls, Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, Final Fantast VII, JRPG, RPG, The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

2 thoughts on “The 5 Most Replayable Single Player RPGs of All-Time (IMHO)”

  1. Maelius says:
    November 11, 2022 at 4:09 am

    Oblivion is more of a come back and play over and over again rpg to Skyrim.
    For me, Skyrim makes builds feel really bland and generic fantasy. As where in Oblivion could pretty much do whatever the hell I could think of!

    Reply
  2. Justin says:
    November 14, 2022 at 10:41 pm

    Awh man! Dragon Age didn’t make any of the cut?? Lol. Good list though. Tha KS for sharing

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow us on social media!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

Must Reads

  • 2023 is Here and The Never Ending Realm Turns 20 Years Old
  • Throwback Bit Thursday: Remembering a Merry 1998 Christmas 
  • A Mid 2022 PlayStation 5 vs Xbox Series X Comparison
  • TBT: Five Critically Underrated 32-Bit Era JRPGs
  • The Rise and Fall of Japanese Role-Playing Games (JRPGs)
  • Yoshida: Final Fantasy is Struggling to Keep Up With Industry Trends
  • The Top Ten Greatest Final Fantasy Games of All-Time
  • Top Ten Greatest ‘The Legend of Zelda’ Games of All Time
  • 5 Of The Best JRPG Heroes
  • The Top 10 Best Selling PlayStation 2 JRPGs (All Time Sales)

Action-Adventure Action-RPG Bandai/Namco Bethesda CD PROJEKT RED Chrono Cross Cyberpunk 2077 Final Fantasy (Series) Final Fantasy IX Final Fantasy VI Final Fantasy VII Final Fantasy VII Remake Final Fantasy XVI First-Person RPG First Person Shooter Halo: Infinite Halo Series JRPG Microsoft Nintendo Nintendo 64 Nintendo Switch PC PlayStation PlayStation 1 PlayStation 2 PlayStation 4 PlayStation 5 RPG SEGA Sega Saturn Sony Square Enix Tales Series The Legend of Dragoon The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time The Legend of Zelda Series XBOX Xbox 360 Xbox Game Pass Xbox One Xbox Series S Xbox Series X Xenogears

  • Legend of Dragoon
    Masayuki Kasebe: The Legend of Dragoon Could Have Saved FFVII Remake
  • Wukong cover
    Wukong Dev: No ‘Black Myth’ Version for Xbox Thanks to Difficulties on Underpowered Series S
  • Astro Bot Water Effects
    2024 Recap: Xbox Launches its Best Games, Xbox Gets out of the Race Against Sony, Astro GotY, and More!
  • Intergalactic protagonist
    Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet the Most Hated New Game Reveal? Concord 2.0?
  • Astro Bot Water Effects
    Astro Bot Review (PS5)
  • FFVII Rebirth
    Final Fantasy VII Rebirth: Welcome to the Multiverse! Review (PS5)
  • Echoes of Wisdom Raises Zelda To New Heights Through Brilliance, Grace and Elegance – My Review and Verdict
  • Legend of Zelda Fanfiction: The Plane of Masked Yearning – Part Seven
  • PS5 Pro
    PlayStation 5 Pro’s $700 Tag: A Peek at a Future Without Xbox?
  • Final Fantasy Pixel Remaster
    Final Fantasy Should be “Political”: Has Sakaguchi Been Misunderstood By News Outlets?
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
Copyright 2022 by Never Ending Realm, Mont Cessna & Samuel Rivera