There is no reason to explain the drill to you, were you spending any serious time scrolling through the interminably long virtual shelves of Steam. You are seeking that one unique designation that serves as a marker of quality in a sea of indie names and AAA ports: “Overwhelmingly Positive.” It is a privilege of the elite, it demands a game to have a minimum of 95% of the total reviews (more than 500) have a positive rating. Typically, a game that is reaching this milestone is a well-known brand such as Portal or Stardew Valley. But there is an underground level of the masterpieces that have made it to the top of this mountain of praise and have somehow been able to remain unnoticed by the mainstream. After spending many hours searching in my personal library to confirm these assertions, I can state with certainty that these six titles are already amongst the finest experiences that gaming has to offer, at least even once your preferred Discord server starts talking about them.
An example is Take Hypnospace Outlaw. This game is a fever dream come true in the event that you have any nostalgia about the early days of the internet, which is GeoCities, blink tags, and MIDI background music. With a 96 percent positive rating, it puts you in an alternative late 90s reality, in which people are browsing the Hypnospace through a headband as they sleep. You are not but a mere lurker, you are an Enforcer. Your task is to patrol the digital border, track down cases of copyright violations, underground payment systems and internet weirdness. It begins as a weird parody of the Y2K culture, full of desktop pets and GIFs but as you unravel the layers of the forum posts and personal pages, you fall into something much deeper, darker of a conspiracy. It is an excellent work of digital archaeology that is very deserving of curiosity and is well deserving of it.
Then there is a title that turns the table on the detective genre: The Roottrees are Dead. In most mystery games, you are required to determine who has committed a crime, but the tragedy is already taken place here. He is the heir to a huge candy fortune, but the entire family (Roottree) died in a plane crash. You have an incredible 97 percent positive rating, and all you need to do is unravel a terrible tangle of family tree and find out who is the one who really inherits the estate. This includes the hours of online researchers, searching through the archived articles, photographs, and testimonies to create an enormous family tree. It includes an ordinary story mode and an expert mode called Roottreemania, which consists of those who want to unravel the secrets of a especially disorganized branch of the family. When the dots finally come together and the reasoning becomes clear it is so fulfilling.
You want to play puzzles whose physical aspect will be as irritatingly challenging as possible, then the Sausage Roll by Stephen cannot be overlooked. Its rating of 96 makes it look like a mere cooking simulator by children yet it is really one of the most painfully brilliant puzzle games ever created. A character with a fork is controlled and you are supposed to roll uncooked sausages onto grills to cook them both sides. You missed a sausage and you burn it, you lose. The gameplay is easy, and the design of the levels is brilliance. You will waste twenty minutes looking at the screen with such a discovery as to the existence of a secret movement mechanic, of whom you had never known before. It is the type of game that makes you feel as a genius when you manage to solve a single screen, and then demean you like a minute the next one.
At the other extreme of the intensity range is (the) Gnorp Apologue. According to 95% positive rating, this game is a pure joy to those who love incremental progress and efficacy. It is based on the marvellous absurdity of this: there is a great rock, and as soon as you strike it you get resources. You begin with clicking, however, after a short time you engage the services of gnorps, tiny creatures shaped like C, to carry out the heavy work. You find yourself with your own elaborate ecosystem of gnorps with jetpacks and gnorps with miniguns and mountaineer gnorps that climb the heaps of rubble to push pebbles down to runners. It does not take weeks to complete (the) Gnorp Apologue, unlike many games where one is forced to wait in order to complete them, and this makes it a perfect binge game over a weekend and any other person who is obsessed with seeing numbers increase in the most imaginative way possible.
Kenshi is the sandbox experience to those who would rather lose themselves in the world that really does not care whether they live or die. Being rated 95% positive reviews, it is infamously hard to explain since it can be whatever you make of it. You can begin as an unknown in a desert, with an amputated arm, and no bread, or a merchant with a pack bag. It is advertisement world, a large, post-apocalyptic wasteland in which you can lead an individual adventurer or create a successful city with a workable economy. It is a narrative game in which losing is in some way more fun than winning. Either you are being devoured by cannibals or emerging as a legendary sword fighter Kenshi is a game that offers certain freedom and a sense of emergent gameplay that is difficult to find in other games.
Last but not least, there is the game that has just left Early Access in late 2024, Caves of Qud which is a masterpiece of a science-fantasy world-building. It has a 95 percent positive rating, and its visual style is extremely minimalist and retro to narrate a world that is too lush and bizarre. You can be a “True Kin” or a mutated human, where you can get abilities such as having more than one arm, telepathy, or you can sprout wings. The amount of interactivity is unlike any other game; you can speak to nearly everything, and the geekiness of lore is as profound as it is bizarre. It is a roguelike in its purest canonic sense where each death brings you some new insight into the radioactive jungles and chrome ruins of Qud. It is a game in which you can end up having a sentient wall as your friend or murder yourself because of eating the wrong mushroom, and each second of it is purposeful and creative.
The Steam is a giant ocean, and although the high-grossers are worth the hype they get, the six titles mentioned herein demonstrate that some of the most rewarding experiences are buried only a few feet below the sea. All of them have something of their own: be it the nostalgic journey of a fake internet or the fight to survive a post-apocalyptic wasteland. You can go wrong with none of these masterpieces of “Overwhelmingly Positive,” can you? If you need your next obsession, you really can’t go wrong.
Disclaimer: The information provided in this article has been collected from publicly available sources on the Internet. Readers are requested to verify this information with available sources.
