Stardew Valley never fails to make me get all weirdly emotional.
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Haven't seen Before Your Eyes mentioned yet. It's not a long game, but it's got a good story reliving the main character's life through their eyes. Also, you control it by blinking! As soon as you blink, there will be a time skip.
Pentiment. Just it.
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Eliza. If you are a software engineer working on product there's no game that will come as close as being relatable than this. It's just perfect. Is very short and there's barely any interactivity. The "scifi" layer than runs the main plot is good, as it's extremely believable and well done, but its nothing groundbreaking that has been talked about in other places. But the characters, good lord, the way they speak and experiences they tell... I swear that I have met carbon copies of some of them. Probably the best description of burnout and long days I have ever seen. If you don't work with software this is just a short, flawed VN. But if you do, I highly recommend it.
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Disco Elysium. IMHO the best writing in any game, and by a fucking mile (planescape was good as well but found DE much better). The phone call was ridiculously relatable and there were several other emotional moments that hit hard as well. The silliness was too much at first but it grew on me as it made the rest of the game much more palatable without becoming dark satire.
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Mass Effect. Okay it isnt as well written as the other two above but still manages to pull emotional strings with the characters. Specially Thane and Mordin.
The Xenoblade Chronicles trilogy have had immense moments of emotional ups and downs. Few games just make me sit there to contemplate what just occurred to its story, conflicts, or characters; XBC games have many moments sprinkled through its entire playtime that do that.
Dragon Quest 11. Once with a mermaid side story, once with the main bit.
Katawa Shoujo.
Titanfall 2 really messed me up
Omori and the To The Moon series both hit pretty hard for me. Some others that were up there are Undertale, ESC, Secret Little Haven and Night in the Woods. OneShot, though, felt personal in a way no other game has.
Thomas Was Alone.
How great writing works
I really cared for these literal blocks on screen.
Titanfall 2... I legit cried at the ending. No other fps has ever made me cry lol.
Same. That ending made me hop off for the rest of the week
MyHouse.wad, a Doom 2 map about friendship and loss that really hits hard and awesome. Read the initial post, read the supplemental material on the Google Drive, if you feel like it and then play it.
Super Mario Galaxy also hit me but more for the joy and amazement at the innovative levels and gameplay. One of the few games I played with my wife to 100 % completion.
A lot of good ones, but no one has mentioned Brothers: a Tale of Two Sons. Fairly short, controlling two characters simultaneously was a cool mechanic, and the puzzles were fun but not very challenging. It probably hit me the hardest of any game I've played. I literally teared up every time
spoiler
I pressed older brother's interact button in the final chapter.
I was hoping to see this one here. Been a long while since I played, but it still stands out in my memory. I love the way that game manipulates the control scheme towards the end to perfectly mirror the loss felt by the character (and his eventual overcoming that loss).
I'll probably be the only one here, brave enough, to mention this, but the Gear of War series has had some very real tear jerker moments. I don't think I've ever actually cried, but I've come close and it has definitely left me feeling different after the events. Gears 2, 3, and 5 specifically come to mind. If you know, you know.
I'm playing Ratchet and Clank: A Rift Apart and it's doing a good job of making me feel ways about stuff.
I really loved Cyberpunk 2077 for this, too.
Rocket League also makes me feel emotions. Mostly anger.
And just to add something probably not as well known, Lil Gator Game. For a game specifically for children, I did not expect the heavy hitting emotional story it provided.
Red Dead Redemption. I didn't see the ending coming, unlike RDR2. I bawled like a baby. My father had passed away, and I knew if he had been alive he would have LOVED Red Dead. So the ending hit me extra hard.
Telltale's The Walking Dead. I have never had a gaming experience like it before or since. It drew me in and hit me in the feels over and over
Tears of the Kingdom, man. It's far from a perfect game, but the ending is ASTOUNDINGLY good.
Pyre is structured in such a way that you can't NOT feel something at each of the key moments. These are your guys - specifically the ones you rely on to secure victory in tough spots. You can't help but feel something when
spoiler
you finally earn them their freedom, never to see them again... or when the possibility of their freedom suddenly becomes impossible, doomed to remain forever in the near-inhospitable Downside. And at the very end, when the choice happens, it's HARD to make.
Ether One made me cry a lot