The best Konami game on every PlayStation console

Konami existed as an arcade manufacturer before jumping to consoles and created some of the most memorable games on NES, including Gastlevan and Metal equipment. They came well with Nintendo until the first 3D era, when they started supporting Sony more on PS1. It was a trend that many Japanese companies followed during this generation because PS1 was the new hotness, and N64 just didn't have the same pizazz as NES or SNES did.

In addition to PS1, Konami helped to decorate Playstation consoles with unforgettable experiences. Let's try to figure out Which Konami game prefers the highest above others on each of the seven current Playstation platforms.

Castlevania: Symphony of the Night (PS1)

A not so miserable pile of secrets

Konami came out in strong support for PS1 with four really good choices for games on the platform, including Metal Gear Solid, Silent Hill, and Suikoda 2. Castlevania: Night's symphony However, is a step above them all, as the experience helped to create a whole genre. How many games does it have the claim to be praised or has a place in the meme history with cheesy lines like “what is a man … a miserable pile of secrets.”

Night's symphony Is also an infinitely replayable game on all platforms on which it is shown, thanks to its RPG mechanics and deep gear system. The game may not have groundbreaking graphics, but it compensates more than with its genre-defining Metroidvania game.

What an excitement

There are two Metal equipment Games that collide for their place at the top of Konami; s PS2 days, including other conam plays that Castlevania: Lament of Innocence, Silent Hill 2, and Enders zone: The second runner. Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater Wins out like not only the best Konami game on PS2, but for many, as the best entry into the series. This was the game where Hideo Kojima proved that Big Boss worked just as well as a main character as a solid snake.

As the sequels continued, players could see why Big Boss had their downfall in the original Metal equipment. In addition to the gripping story, this PS2 game had a cool camouflage system and inventive boss -rich goals, and the pressed PS2's power for everything it had.

Portable perfection

PSP may be the best supported system as far as Metal equipment Games are going between Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops and its expansion, both Metal gear acid games and even a motion-based pseudo-remake of Metal Gear Solid. Then it was the cherry on top: Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker. It was the perfect portable experience with short assignments and a game twist at Nintendos Pokemon game.

Instead of catching cute critters, players could go out and recruit soldiers to Mother Base. Beyond that, Peace walkers Felt like a full -fledged numbered sequel, not just a throw spinoff, thanks to Big Boss gripping backstory.

Disc and dice

Metal Gear Solid 4: Patriots Weapon had many amazing things to go for it, and Castlevania: Lords of Shadow was an interesting idea for a restart. But there is nothing like the over-the-top nature of Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance, between its game mechanics and story.

How many Metal equipment Games have enabled players to literally disc through metal gears earlier or get stuck to fast metal? It was a brilliant collaboration between Konami and Platinumgames that made Raiden an even cooler Cyborg Ninja than before. The only downside is that this spinoff never got a proper sequel or even a remaster, even though he retains his sterling reputation for this day.

Silent Hill: Book of Memories (PS Vita)

Narrow pickings


Silent Hill: Book of Memories Tag Page Cover Art

Silent Hill: Book of Memories

System

Playstation-1

Published

October 16, 2012

ESRB

M for mature 17+ // blood and gore, language, suggestive themes, violence



PS Vita had almost no support from Konami, and therefore this top choice can be controversial. Silent Hill: Book of Memories is not sensible, because it was strange Diablo-Like Dungeon Crawler instead of a moody horror game. It didn't match the rest of the series, but it doesn't hurt. Year late, R -fans and critics have both appreciated what the game is doing well instead of what it was not.

It should be noted that Metal Gear Solid HD Collection was a good collection that worked well on PS Vita, and it included Metal Gear Solid 2: Liberty Sons and Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater. Unlike the console versions, however, it was missing Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker In the package, which is just not right, and a collection does not seem to be the right way to celebrate a company's contribution to a system.

Kojima's last stand

Metal Gear Solid 5: The Phantom Pain Was Hideo Kojima's last big game at Konami before leaving because of creative differences and started his own studio. It can be said that the game remains unfinished, at least to Kojima's standards, but at the launch it was still a remarkable experience.

It took all of these Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker Ideas and made them better, from CQC mechanics to Fulton Balloon System. In addition, the open world environments encouraged players to be more creative with their stealth tactics. It was a solid (word game intended) way for Kojima to go out, and it also made a good last chapter for the misunderstood one -eyed anti -hero, Big Boss.

Silent Hill 2 (PS5)

James and the Giant Pyramid Head

PS5's fate has not yet been established, but so far there have been some good conam plays that Suikoda 1 & 2 HD Remaster, Gate Rune and Dunan Unification Wars. Plus, Silent Hill f and Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater View promise when it comes to upcoming titles. But right now, remake of Silent Hill 2 is far from the best Konami game on the system.

Silent Hill 2 was already the best game in the series, between its haunting story about James Sunderland who tried to find his deceased wife among strange in an abandoned city and its nightmare but iconic monsters. The Bloober team did a good job of redoing a classic for Konami and preserved the original integrity while he went one step above to give the game his signature horror brand.

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