Everybody knows Call of Duty, Halo, Half-Life 2, and Bad Company 2, but plenty of great FPS games have become forgotten over time, destined to only appear in these types of articles as memories by someone who loves to track down gems from yesteryear. There are many reasons a video game masterpiece might never attract the attention it deserves or slip through the cracks in time, and quite a few of these titles have not been properly preserved and made easily accessible to a modern audience.
Honestly, there are dozens of games that fit this topic, but let’s start with only a couple for the time being. While some of them cannot be purchased digitally nowadays, a few of these upcoming shooters are available on Steam, so you can go and play them right now without too much hassle.
The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher Bay
One Of The Greatest FPS Movie License Games Ever
Not only has The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher Bay been largely forgotten, but it has been impossible to buy since the mid-2010s, when it was delisted alongside Assault on Dark Athena (which had a remaster of the 2004 cult classic). Unless you manage to find physical copies of either the original or Dark Athena, you will need to get creative to play one of the greatest movie-licensed games of all time, one that was pretty forward-thinking at the time. To make players truly embody Riddick, the game ensured that his body was presented, something that wasn’t common during an era when FPS protagonists were basically just floating hands or guns.
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Escape from Butcher Bay is primarily a first-person stealth game with shooter elements, and Riddick relies on his knife and unarmed melee attacks way more than guns. These mechanics are elevated by directional swings and a great counter system, while the handful of available ranged weapons are a blast to use. Even the prison setting was (and still is) fantastic and immersive, and you aren’t just running through hallways and corridors.
Who should play The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher Bay?
Folks who love immersive sims like Deus Ex should really give this game a try, presuming they can acquire it.
TimeShift
A Great FPS That Has Been Forgotten With Time
Towards the end of 2025, I went through a period in which I fell in love with “bad” games from the PS3 and Xbox 360 era, playing through maligned titles like Legendary, Inversion, Blades of Time, Lost Planet 3, and Kane & Lynch 2: Dog Days. Somehow, I mentally classified TimeShift as part of this group, only to quickly discover that Saber Interactive put together a plainly great game and not one that can only be enjoyed when in a specific frame of mind.
2007 was a banner year for FPS gaming, and TimeShift just got overshadowed by Halo 3, BioShock, Crysis, and Modern Warfare. Admittedly, it isn’t as brilliant as any of those all-time masterpieces, but that hardly reflects badly on it. As suggested by its name, TimeShift centers around controlling time, with players being able to manipulate the world and mess with enemies. Although used in many scripted events, the game gives players relatively free access to the ability to slow, rewind, or stop time, which kind of turns every battle into a puzzle. Also, the actual puzzles use these mechanics well.
Famously, TimeShift went through a substantial transformation during its development, transforming from steampunk to a gritty aesthetic that matched the direction FPS games were heading. This made sense at the time, but it also meant that the game just kind of looked like everything else released during that era. Trust me, TimeShift is not a generic shooter.
Who should play TimeShift?
Anybody with a Steam account.
Cryostasis: Sleep of Reason
A Creepy-As-Heck Psychological Horror FPS Game
Let’s shift away from stealth and action to psychological horror. The genre was booming during the late 2000s and early 2010s, but Cryostasis: Sleep of Reason never managed to break free from its niche cult rank. Unfortunately, the PC-exclusive game was delisted in 2013 from GOG and Steam, further cementing its status as an underappreciated gem that a handful of people vaguely remember enjoying.
Developed by a Ukrainian studio, Cryostasis drops players in a shipwrecked icebreaker that is effectively just one big chilling graveyard. This goes beyond just the tense atmosphere, as the protagonist literally dies if he spends too much time away from a heat source. The game is reminiscent of Metro 2033, albeit swapping underground tunnels for the dark interior of a massive ship. To tell its story, Cryostasis allows players to enter the minds of corpses to not only live through that person’s final moments, but also try to change things and save them. These sequences are all essentially puzzles, as you have to find the way to survive a scenario.
Although it didn’t run that well, Cryostasis was a technical marvel for 2009, which reflected its ambition.
Who should play Cryostasis?
Anybody into slow-paced horror with some first-person shooting.
Guess the games from the emojis.

Guess the games from the emojis.
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No One Lives Forever 2: A Spy in H.A.R.M.’s Way
Here Is An FPS Series That Should Have Lived On Forever
The Operative: No One Lives Forever is the default pick for “forgotten FPS games that are 10/10 masterpieces,” and it 100% deserves that reputation. However, its sequel not only deserves the same degree of love and respect, but it also perfects many of the ideas introduced by its predecessor. Make no mistake about it, No One Lives Forever 2: A Spy in H.A.R.M.’s Way is among the greatest first-person shooters of all time, along with being arguably the best spy game ever AND the best spy parody game ever.
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It improves upon the first game’s stealth AI, level design, gadgets, and emergent gameplay, all the while introducing progression through a skill point system. No One Lives Forever 2 further immortalized Cate Archer as one of the coolest protagonists in gaming history, and it is a shame that she only got to star in two releases. This game is far more than just a send-up of 60s spy movies, and it is just a fantastic all-around experience. Due to its license being seemingly owned by three companies, this series will probably never, ever rematerialize.
Who should play No One Lives Forever 2?
Anybody looking for a stylish, vibrant shooter that lets them decide how to approach missions.
Peter Jacksonโs King Kong
It Was License Hell That Killed The Beast
If this article shows anything, it is that great licensed games are not a recent phenomenon. During the mid-2000s, players had every reason to be skeptical of games adopting movies, particularly something like King Kong that doesn’t seem like a natural fit for a first-person shooter. The thing is, Ubisoft has a pretty good track record when it comes to these types of licensed projects, and King Kong benefits from the fact that it came out in a pre-Far Cry 3 era.
Don’t get me wrong, Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora is a really fun game built around the modern Ubisoft formula, so I’m not against using Far Cry as a basis for adapting a license. However, King Kong would have aged far worse if it had gone down the open-world route.
Rather than dropping players in an open-world version of Skull Island, the game consists of linear levels that switch perspectives between Jack Driscoll and Kong. Presented in third-person and capturing the gorilla icon’s scale and raw power, the latter sections are the highlight of the campaign; however, they are complemented perfectly by the first-person human sections. With a lack of a HUD or even crosshairs, King Kong is surprisingly immersive, and it does an admirable job of making players feel like weaklings surrounded by far bigger and more dangerous creatures. The game is basically a survival shooter game, albeit one that delivers “survival” through things like scarce ammo rather than meter management.
Who should play King Kong?
Another game lost to licensed hell, King Kong would be the easiest recommendation if we could just jump onto Steam and purchase a copy. Unfortunately, that isn’t an option, but the game was released on plenty of consoles. I recommend getting the Xbox 360 version.
Strife: Veteran Edition
Merge DOOM With A Fantasy RPG, And You Get A Masterpiece
Initially, I was going to pick the original 1996 version, Strife: Quest for the Sigil, but I figured that people are far more likely to play the 2014 enhanced version in 2026. Either way, Strife is an awesome early attempt at an FPS-RPG hybrid, one that predates the likes of Thief and Deus Ex by years.
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Like seemingly every shooter from the mid-90s, Strife was built using the DOOM engine, although it came out at a time when the genre was starting to move away from that 2.5D style. Visually, Strife never looked amazing, but it made up for that by introducing a hub world, NPCs who react to the player’s behavior, and even dialogue options. Although sufficient as a run-and-gun shooter, Strife made stealth viable as an approach method, something that really wasn’t common during this era.
To be frank, I prefer other underrated ’90s shooters like Blood, Powerslave, SiN, and Redline, but Strife was a far more experimental release. (That said, play all those games if you haven’t yet.)
Who should play Strife: Veteran Edition?
Finally, an FPS masterpiece that is readily available on stores like Steam. As long as somebody enjoys ’90s boomer shooters and doesn’t mind a slower pace, they should add this to their library.
The Darkness
Pull This FPS Game Out Of The Darkness Of Obscurity
OK, I know what you are thinking, “Come on, The Darkness is pretty well known.” Don’t worry, I hear you, but I would counter that most people likely remember the 2012 sequel rather than the 2007 original. The Darkness 2 is not only an amazing game (and a better shooter than its predecessor), but it has been preserved through a PC version that is still readily available today. Comparatively, The Darkness has slipped far more through the cracks due to only releasing on the Xbox 360 and PS3. While the Xbox 360 version is backwards compatible with the Xbox One and Series X/S (and can be purchased on the Xbox store), players who only have a PS4 or PS5 have to rely on PS Plus Premium’s streaming function to play it, a feature that most people only use begrudgingly.
If compared solely on the quality of their combat and gunplay, The Darkness 2 is the superior entry; however, when both games are viewed as complete packages, The Darkness comes out on top. A grim tale of tragedy, loss, and corruption, the campaign is not afraid to touch upon heavy themes, and Jack’s Demon Arms are unsettlingly vicious rather than just satisfying to use. Turning light into an enemy was such an inspired choice that Alan Wake would go on to repeat it, and The Darkness has far better gameplay than that 2010 release.
Who should play The Darkness?
Any FPS fans who want a character-driven masterpiece that makes you feel powerful but also predatory. Also, anybody who wants to watch To Kill a Mockingbird. Seriously, there is a scene that lets you watch the movie from beginning to end.
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