Full point games:
The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt - HIGHLIGHT
Picking the highlight was really easy for me. I've been following The Witcher series since day one and it has been incredible to see just how much CD Projekt RED improved with each installment of the series, culminating in TW3. I love almost everything about this game. I love the world, I love the characters, I love the atmosphere, I love the soundtrack, I love how the sidequests feel like meaningful content and not like filler in many other open world RPGs... It was simply an amazing experience. Sure, the combat is a bit too simple and the controls are bit janky, but as a complete package, The Witcher 3 is unrivaled for me. Can't wait to see if CDPR can top themselves again.
Gothic 2 - UNDERRATED
One of the first open world RPGs where the world actually felt like a living, breathing place and not just a virtual playground. The world is huge, yet hand-crafted and a joy to explore. The combat is tough and rewarding. The guild system greatly incentives multiple playthroughs. On top of that, the game was made even better with the Night of the Raven expansion, which introduced a brand new, amazing region of the world and tied up a lot of loose ends from the first Gothic game. Piranha Bytes' masterpiece, which probably won't ever be topped by them.
Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic
Both Bioware's best game and the best Star Wars game. It captured the spirit of Star Wars perfectly, the story was epic in the true sense of the word, the light/dark side alignment system was amazingly fun and allowed you to truly live out your Star Wars related nerd fantasies. A game so good, Bioware has been using its formula ever since.
Dark Souls: Prepare to Die Edition
Plenty was said about Dark Souls already, so I'll just mentions the stand out things that make it such a special game for me: the insanely atmospheric, dangerous and meticulously hand-crafted world, where death awaits at every corner and which is just super enthralling to explore; the subtle storytelling that doesn't throw the story in your face, but leaves you to make your own discoveries and interpretations; the absence of all handholding that makes discovering the game's mechanics so much more fun; and the difficulty that can be a little bit frustrating, but all the more rewarding when you finally get past the obstacles in your way.
Pokémon Heart Gold/Soul Silver
Definitely my favorite Pokémon titles. Gold/Silver were already great and these remakes polished them to be even greater. Two regions, my favorite Pokémon designs, the best graphic style in the entire franchise, and the classic great Pokémon gameplay loop. The only real problem I have with HG/SS is the terrible Pokémon distribution that leaves you underleveled for most of the game and doesn't allow you to play with some of the cooler Gen2 Pokémon until the very late game.
Fallout: New Vegas
I was torn whether to give this spot to Fallout 2 or New Vegas. I adore both, but in the end I decided I like NV a bit more. Obsidian took Bethesda's extremely flawed (but still kinda fun) Fallout 3, fixed a lot of issues I had with it and created a game that I have no problem calling a true successor to Fallout 2. It's a game that's more interested in presenting a compelling vision of a society that's slowly rebuilding itself after the apocalypse, rather than a game that's mostly interested in giving the player many different ways to make supermutant heads explode in a post-apocalyptic themed amusement park. The difference in writing quality between NV and F3 is just immense. We all know the game was notoriously buggy at launch, but with both Obsidian's and community patches, that's mostly fixed by now and NV can finally shine like it was always meant to.
System Shock 2
"Sublime" is the word I would use to describe SS2. It's like a perfect machine - everything contributes to the immaculately polished whole and nothing is superfluous. It's not the best FPS or the best RPG you've ever played, but all of the parts just work together so well. Right from the first steps I took on Von Braun, I knew I was playing something special. Unmatched atmosphere that will just suck you in. If you can't forgive the game the dated graphics, of course.
Planescape: Torment
Probably the best written RPG I've ever played. Yes, the combat sucks, but who cares, when you're presented with such a fascinating world like nothing you've ever seen in a video game, an amazing cast of bizarre characters that truly feels alive, and so many weird and interesting ideas that could fill several books. Truly a unique game that can hardly be replicated, as evidenced by Tides of Numenera.
Divinity: Original Sin 2
Yeah, I haven't finished the game, but 70 hours in, I'm very confident in putting this in my top 10. The first DOS was great, but this is just something else. There's just so much freedom – where other RPGs would slap your hand and tell you you're not allowed to experiment outside of what the designers intended, Divinity gives you a hammer and tells you to smash stuff. Or build stuff, if you're so inclined. There's so many moments where you wonder if you could could do something and you're met with a resounding "yes!". Yes, you can kill a man in a packed inn by creating a water puddle, poisoning that puddle and letting him die while you're safely somewhere else. Yes, you can kill him by initiating a bar brawl with other characters. Yes, you can give him tainted stew and kill him on the way from the outhouse. Or you could just do something else, anything else. Almost every quest can be solved in a multitude of ways, intended or not, the game is so packed full of content you probably won't ever see all of it and on top of that, the story is actually interesting and full of well written characters this time!
Shin Megami Tensei: Persona 4
It's a weird pick for this list, but it's a game I truly adore. I don't play many JRPGs at all, but I just wanted to see what all the hype for the Persona series was about and I was immediately hooked. The cast of characters is super likeable, the setting was a great change of pace from the traditional sci-fi/fantasy RPGs and the soundtrack has quickly became one of my favorite video game OSTs of all time. The combat and dungeon crawling got a bit monotonous near the end, but that doesn't make one of my favorite gaming experiences in recent memory that much worse.
Honorable mentions:
Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords
I feel this game at least deserves a mention since I nominated the first KotOR for the top 10. Back when it first released, I really didn't like it very much, but it has grown on me a lot since then. It's possibly one of the most interesting Star Wars stories ever told and it isn't afraid of challenging your expectations at all. Shame it was so unfinished when it came out, but the Restoration Mod helped a lot to alleviate that issue.
Mass Effect 2
Probably the least RPG-ish game on my list, but I can't really deny it the nomination. It dumbed down the RPG system of the first game somewhat, but it more than made up for it with the revamped combat. My favorite cast of characters from all the Bioware games, an engrossing world and one of the best final missions in any video game ever.
Might and Magic VI: The Mandate of Heaven
Huge, varied world with dozens of unique and large dungeons, all of which have their own tilesets and enemies. The story kind of sucks, but the world is just so entertaining to explore. It's just pure fun to play casually, one dungeon at a time.
Dragon's Dogma: Dark Arisen
Super fun combat system, surprisingly deep class system. Creating your own pawn and renting it to other players was a really interesting mechanic. The original game was a bit too easy, but Bitterblack Isle was a really solid chunk of dungeon delving goodness.
Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines
Amazingly atmospheric with a legendary amount of bugs, but with Unofficial Patch, it's hard not to recommend. The different vampire clans make for a great replay value.
Legend of Grimrock 2
A bit overlooked dungeon crawler. Superior in almost every way to the already great first Grimrock, it follows the classic sequel formula of "add more stuff everywhere" and does it really well. Really addictive, there's always something interesting behind every corner, there's always a puzzle that you don't wanna leave unsolved until the next session, there's always that square of the map that you haven't been to.
Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn
A true classic. I don't adore it as much as others do, but it's a really solid RPG that's packed full of interesting content.
Fallout 2
Another true classic. As I already mentioned in my FNV writeup, I adore this game, but I didn't want to have multiple of the same franchise in the top 10 and I just like FNV a bit more.
The Age of Decadence
Age of Decadence is unrivaled in its choices and consequences and story branching, is set in a very interesting setting of post-apocalyptic not!Roman Empire and offers you an entirely different experience every time you play it... and also it's ugly as sin, basically hates you, the player, and fucks you over at any opportunity, whether in combat or dialogue. I understand that it's a deliberate choice by the developers to make the world feel dangerous and make you want to avoid combat as much as possible, but it makes it really hard to recommend to anyone who isn't a hardcore CRPG player. A shame, because I really like the game, but I don't know many people who would feel the same way.
The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind
Bethesda should get at least one nod in this list, right? I think Morrowind deserves it. It's still their best game – simply super immersive, doesn't hold your hand at all and Vvardenfell with its mushroom trees is one of the most memorable RPG worlds I've ever seen.
--VOTE INFO START--
<FULL POINT GAMES – 2 points>
{HIGHLIGHT – 3 points} The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt
{UNDERRATED – 4 points} Gothic 2
Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic
Dark Souls: Prepare to Die Edition
Pokémon Heart Gold/Soul Silver
Fallout: New Vegas
System Shock 2
Planescape: Torment
Divinity: Original Sin 2
Persona 4
<HONORABLE MENTIONS – 1 point>
Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords
Mass Effect 2
Might and Magic VI: The Mandate of Heaven
Dragon's Dogma: Dark Arisen
Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines
Legend of Grimrock 2
Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn
Fallout 2
The Age of Decadence
The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind
--VOTE INFO END--