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Here are seven PlayStation role-playing games that are still worth playing today.
7) Parasite Eve

Parasite Eve is such a compelling experiment. Squaresoft wanted to jump in on the Resident Evil craze, but wasn’t looking to drop its RPG roots. Instead, players got something somewhere between RE and Final Fantasy. The first M-rated game from Square used the developer’s mastery of PS1 graphical tech to make a truly disturbing RPG filled with tense combat and surprising scares. It is tough to get your hands on these days, but if you find a copy, it’s worth checking out.
6) Chrono Cross

It remains one of the great mysteries of gaming that Chrono Trigger wasn’t turned into a massive franchise. After all, the original game was made by Square, which has been more than willing to churn out dozens of Final Fantasy games over the years. Meanwhile, Chrono Trigger, which is a legendary release, has one sequel. Thankfully, Chrono Cross is a solid follow-up, mixing innovative combat with a memorable cast and one of the best stories on the system. If only this weren’t the end for the Chrono series.
5) Wild Arms

Wild Arms doesn’t get mentioned as much as it should among the PlayStation’s best RPGs. Sure, it doesn’t quite live up to games like Final Fantasy in the visual fidelity department, but Wild Arms is dripping with style. Developer Media Vision put together an exceptional blend of fantasy, sci-fi, and the Wild West to give players an ambitious world that somehow all makes sense. The Western genre is sorely missing much representation in the RPG market, but Wild Arms more than does its part.
4) Xenogears

Xenogears had a long and winding path to its release date. It was first pitched as Final Fantasy 7, but Square decided to move in a different direction. Then, it was going to be a sequel to Chrono Trigger, but it was eventually decided that Xenogears would be its own original game. You can still see some of the bones of those games, and Xenogears does drop off a bit in its second half, but it’s so ambitious that it doesn’t really matter. If nothing else, it’s worth playing through Xenogears to experience its phenomenal soundtrack in context. Plus, if you love modern-day Xeno games, you owe it to yourself to try out the series’ first game.











