bin.pol.social

supersquirrel, (edited ) do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I

Farm Together 2 is AWESOME

store.steampowered.com/app/…/Farm_Together_2/

The graphics are nice but don’t make the game stand out which is a minor shame since this is by far my favorite “build a farm” type game.

Splitscreen co-op and multiplayer is a blast and the game flow is very chill but rewarding.

JovialSodium,

Maybe. I like a farming sims but I think it might be a hard sell. Though the cute graphics might help. How in the going in to town portion of the game? Does it have RPG elements? While I like that kind of thing, I don’t think she will.

supersquirrel, (edited )

Not really though I get how the game seems like it might be like that, in fact what I like about Farm Together 1 and 2 is that they are very focused on the actual moment to moment process of a running an arcadey farm. It is almost like a realtime boardgame or simple economy simulator, which makes the core gameplay loop immediately salient to anybody. You can pick up a controller, jump in and start helping out on the farm, it is a very simple, relaxed and rewarding gameplay loop and it makes the perfect co-op game because of it. There aren’t long cutscenes and lots of stuff and context you have to explain, it is a pick up and play experience.

It isn’t a shallow game either, while the game by no means “hard” in the sense that there aren’t really fail states, figuring out how to create an economy with your farm is a really interesting challenge and the wide variety of unlocks encourage and reward strategizing. The graphics are deceptive, there is a genuine engine building game at the heart of Farm Together 2.

waggz, do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I

journey to savage planet sounds like it fits your criteria

naticus, do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I

Abiotic Factor has been a blast with a friend. I don’t play a lot of survival games (I prefer more narrative than most offer, and Grounded was a great one for that) and this one doesn’t take itself very seriously (you craft weapons and armor from general office supplies a lot of the time… I’ve never been so excited to find a cache of staplers).

May want to turn the difficulty down if she gets overwhelmed easily, as while they majority of the game is pretty manageable, there are the occasional hard fight.

JovialSodium,

She won’t like a survival crafter, but I do!

naticus,

I’ll take half credit! Lol. It’s ridiculous in the best ways. I still have no idea how much longer we have on our playthrough but it is a pretty long game… Or we suck, which is very plausible.

Arkhive,

I tried to get my friend group into this and most of them bounced off. I tried to convince the “hardcore gamers” of the group that by the looks of it things get quite hard in the late game. Bummed I never really got to experience it to that point.

justdaveisfine, (edited ) do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I

Semi-casual games that run well on older PCs and linux? Plus no launchers? Let’s see.
I got a few but there may be splitscreen ones in this list too. (If that’s ok)

  • Battleblock Theater
  • Biped (maybe?)
  • Cassette Beasts
  • Castle Crashers
  • Children of Morta
  • Don’t Starve Together
  • Dinkum (If Australian Animal Crossing sounds interesting)
  • Factorio
  • A hat in time
  • Guacamelee
  • Human Fall Flat
  • Hyper Light Drifter
  • ibb & obb
  • KeyWe
  • Kingdom Two Crowns
  • Knights and Bikes
  • Like, all of the lego games (They’re all similar mechanically, so pick one of the newer ones that look good)
  • Lovers in a dangerous spacetime
  • Magicka (I like the first one but the second one isn’t bad)
  • Monaco
  • Moon Hunters
  • Necesse
  • Peak
  • Resident Evil 5/6 (Yes, really, its a great time in co-op)
  • Satisfactory
  • Secrets of Grindea
  • Split Fiction (This one may be graphically harder to run?)
  • Stardew Valley
  • Spiritfarer
  • Terraria
  • Trine games
  • Valheim (At least until mistlands)

I’m kind of going off of semi-casual meaning not high intensity shooters or things that require crazy skills. Most of these are pretty easy to pick up and are generally forgiving. They shouldn’t have launchers but if they added one in a later update, then dang.

JovialSodium,

That is quite the list! I know a handful of these but most are new to me. I haven’t gone through it them yet but I wanted to be sure to say thanks for the effort you put in to your reply.

BreakerSwitch,

I will toss in, don’t starve together is very much NOT beginner friendly. Playing with someone less experienced with video games can turn into effectively playing with one hand behind your back as you try to cover the needs for both of you, the world is threatening, and the penalty for death is high. Might not be well suited to what you’re looking for

Tanoh,

Semi-casual Factorio

Are you trying to kill him?

justdaveisfine,

Playing Factorio co-op was one of the games that got my wife into gaming. She couldn’t do quick reaction time shooters, but Factorio at its most basic is essentially a ‘puzzle’ game.

… But yeah we lost a few weekends or weeks or months to it. The factory must grow.

Zoomboingding,
@Zoomboingding@lemmy.world avatar

Don’t Starve is anything but casual lol

Essence_of_Meh, (edited ) do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I
@Essence_of_Meh@lemmy.world avatar

Since you mentioned platformers, Rayman Origins might be worth a look. It’s a 2D platformer from 2011 so it doesn’t require a lot of power, levels take a few minutes to complete so it’s perfect for short sessions and it has local co-op (up to 4 players).

I tried it recently on my desktop (Pop!_OS, ubuntu based) and Steam Deck, played without issues on both of them.

JovialSodium,

Thanks! While I’ve heard of the franchise, I’ve never actually played a Rayman game before. But a local co-op platformer sounds good.

Essence_of_Meh,
@Essence_of_Meh@lemmy.world avatar

Older games are purely singleplayer, multi is something they leaned on later on. For PC Rayman Legends also supports local co-op, I believe. This one however is only available on Steam and requires Uplay account or linking your Steam to it. Origins is available on both Steam and GOG - I can confirm the latter version does not require any additional accounts or services.

Finally, there’s Rayman Raving Rabbids but that’s more of a mini-game compilation/party game rather than a platformer. It also has multiplayer.

B0NK3RS, do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I
@B0NK3RS@lemmy.world avatar

Kingdom: Two Crowns is great fun in co-op.

JovialSodium,

I’m not sure I could convince her to play a tower defense style game. But it looks like MY kind of game, so thanks for the recommendation!

Grail,
@Grail@multiverse.soulism.net avatar

It’s actually a mediaeval economy simulator

iamthetot,

I don’t really think I’d call it a tower defense game tbh.

Durandal, (edited ) do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I
@Durandal@lemmy.today avatar

Some obvious suggestions seem to be:

  • Terraria
  • Stardew Valley

Sorta requires another account… technically… .Minecraft. IDK, maybe hytale would fill that niche. There’s also some FOSS options like luanti that would be nearly indistinguishable.

  • Left4Dead2
  • Portal 2
  • No Man’s Sky

Some lesser known stuff:

  • Core Keeper
  • Dungeon Defenders
  • RoboQuest
  • Valheim

Category suggestion: Kart racing. There are no shortage of brands of that… sonic just came out with a new one and there’s a couple really good sonic kart racers already out there that are on steam and console. Played a lot of sonic and all stars racing transformed with my wife and we had fun… it goes super cheap on sales and has remote play together so you’d only need one copy for both of you… isthereanydeal.com/game/…/history/-chart:ov… , mario kart, etc.

es-de is a really nice front end you can have in steam for couch coop emulation, I hear.

ech,

Terraria’s also getting it’s next major update in a week, so it’s a great time to get into it.

Durandal,
@Durandal@lemmy.today avatar

Yeah, we saw the announcement and prompted us to reinstall it for some coop play.

Looks like it goes on sale like… every month or two. isthereanydeal.com/game/terraria/history/

Grabbing it for a fiver is like a no brainer if you get into the style of game. I wouldn’t be surprised if there was a sale when the patch comes out to promote it.

JovialSodium,

I know and like almost all of these games! Unfortunately I don’t think she’ll like any of them. Maybe some of the early levels of dungeon defenders.

RoboQuest caught my attention. While I generally don’t gravitate towards roguelikes or FPS’s, the combo has my interest piqued!

Durandal,
@Durandal@lemmy.today avatar

It’s really hard to suggest games without knowing what you guys normally would play. You mention puzzle games. There are a ton of two player puzzle games that you play head to head which might be fun, but it isn’t coop exactly. I highly recommend super puzzle fighter ii turbo. It’s available thru emulation and I think maybe on steam via that capcom arcade thing. There are lots of games that fit into that category if it ends up appealing.

If you have access to any of the games mentioned… maybe just have her try some of them and see what clicks. I know with my wife she wasn’t really a “gamer” at first… and I just let her loose on my steam games and a few that she would have never considered before became favorites like half-life, portal, l4d2. Most of the valve stuff holds up really well and makes for good primers into FPS style gaming. We also got really into coop minecraft and dungeon defenders so hundreds of coop hours have been dumped into those. I’d pick a bunch of genre styles (fps, puzzle, survival, etc) and just show her some gameplay videos if she’s reticent to play them sight unseen… see if anything sparks her interest. Then pick out some of the more well regarded titles from them to dive into. There are definitely classics that are considered classics for a reason.

As for roboquest… I’ve enjoyed that one. The dev kept putting out content patches so it’s gotten a bunch of content dumped into it. Fun solo and coop. I personally love the pop art comic style. The progression is rogueLITE… so you’re slowly building up new stuff in your hub as you play, which makes for a nicer experience, IMHO. They even have a free demo on steam if you wanna try it out while you wait for a sale.

Maerman, do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I

It Takes Two, or Split Fiction, by the same developers. Both are fantastic games, designed around couch co-op.

JoMiran, do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I
@JoMiran@lemmy.ml avatar

“It Takes Two” is the game you are looking for.

yaroto98, (edited ) do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I

It takes two

split fiction

These two were the top two favs of my wife and I last year. Played it takes two on our steam decks, and split fiction on our PCs. One of them is older and handled it great. Both pcs run linux.

Zathras,

It Takes Two felt a bit easier/beginner friendly (and I liked the story better), but I would also recommended both of them.

JovialSodium,

Hmm. Interesting options! I’m not sure if she’d enjoy these types of games. But I can show her the trailer at least. Thanks for the recommendation!

I wish they weren’t EA games. Split Fiction at least doesn’t require an EA account so I’ll show her that one.

dellhiver, (edited )

Agree with It Takes Two.

The platforming can be frustrating in parts, but as she’s played Mario and donkey kong, then it should be fine.

I mean the other obvious option are the various Lego games.

Lego Harry Potter etc.

Or as others have said: Overcooked

jacksilver, do games w What challenge from a game isn't worth completing and what challenge from a game is worth completing?

I think the jump rope and volleyball moons in Mario Odyssey were pretty bad. They didn’t really connect to the gameplay and just felt tedious to get.

fletcher_bosom, do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I

Another vote for It Takes Two

Ferrous, do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I
@Ferrous@lemmy.ml avatar

Overcooked

Super mario 3d world

Limbo

Inside

JovialSodium, (edited )

Overcooked: Looks cute, frantic, and fun!

Super mario 3d world: Feeling meh about it.

Limbo: Single player. But looks like something I might like.

INSIDE: Also single player. But somerhingt we both might like.

Ferrous,
@Ferrous@lemmy.ml avatar

Yeah I should’ve mentioned my last 2 are single player. We took turns after each death and it was super enjoyable. Using the controller and navigating is only half the battle with those two games. The other half is just brainstorming and planning a solution to the puzzle.

alianne, do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I

Valheim and Raft are both fun with two people. Raft’s a bit janky but more relaxed. Valheim can be relaxing or as hard as you want to make it (there are world settings you can change and plenty of mods), and although it’s technically still in early access there’s a ton of content.

lime, do games w PC game recommendation for my partner and I
@lime@feddit.nu avatar

minecraft?

JovialSodium,

Oh Minecraft. She’d get bored with an open world sandbox. Maybe there are mods or something that are more story driven, but that’d ruin my nostalgia for the game. Bit of a pickle!

lime,
@lime@feddit.nu avatar

ah, usually the creative aspect draws people in but i know not everyone is that way.

Arkhive, (edited )

I’ve recently gotten into putting together sort of silly “party” mod packs for my friend group. Things that are meant to be played as a “one shot” with everyone online. Things like full loot randomizers, or shared health and inventory. Just silly and chaotic mods to shift the focus from exploration and sandbox-y things, to “let’s try to beat the ender dragon under very adverse conditions”. So far I’ve only gotten one friend to bite, but we’ve been doing one run a night for the last week or so. Takes between 20 to 60 minutes, maybe more if we really get into it.

Could also look into mods/modpacks that add quest books. That helps take the edge off the “open world, figure it out” paralysis and give some concrete things to work towards.

Dragonborn3810,

You mentioned puzzles so maybe a middleground is finding some co-op puzzle maps?

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