Evil Within 2: If you like The Last of Us' gameplay, play this. Very similar with respect to certain stealth elements, weapons breaking, having to preserve ammo, looting the environment, etc. Story isn't the best and characters are quite corny, thin, and forgettable, but after you get about halfway through the game, you really start to appreciate the cheese. It's also hard to not end up invested in the protagonist's struggle to find his daughter even if you haven't played the first. The graphics are also surprisingly good for a "B-grade AAA" game! Dark Cloud 2/Dark Chronicle: A game well ahead of its time. You can take photos, build entire towns and populate them seamlessly, transform and fight as monsters, ride and customize a mech (you could put fucking tank tracks on it), catch fish, raise the fish in an aquarium and crossbreed them, etc. The graphics still hold up wonderfully. Demon's Souls: Relatively few people have played this compared to subsequent Soulsborne games because it was only on PS3. In my honest opinion, this is still the best Souls game although I must say I haven't played Bloodborne yet. It has the most cohesive art design and world-building. Also, a pure magic build is the most viable at pvp out of every Souls game I played. The first optimized build I made for pvp was a mage and I had no problem stomping people despite there being less spell variety than subsequent entries in the series. Maybe pyromancy in Dark Souls compares, or before stuff was nerfed in DkS2 (but there was too much other stuff to cheese casters so moot). Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines: Easily one of the top 10 RPGs I have ever played after you install the pseudo-canon bug fix pack(s). Actions have real consequences in this game, even the ones you make when initially creating a character. For example, there's a certain clan of vampires you an play as who can only travel throughout the world in sewers basically because of how blatantly vampiric they are in appearance to humans, and another who are effectively schizophrenic and it actually affects your playthrough. The world is very intimate much like a Deus ex game and decently responsive to player's actions. If you're caught doing supernatural shit by innocent humans like feeding, a group of human vampire hunters start stalking you. The characters are sooooo 90's/early 2000s it was like they were ripped out of Buffy the Vampire Slayer but regardless, they are more complex and interesting than the overwhelming majority of characters nowadays in games. The story and plot are also nice too! Lost Odyssey: I definitely wouldn't replay this simply because I don't have the time for JRPGs with "traditional" combat systems anymore. The story is amazing, characters are wonderfully multidimensional, and the soundtrack easy rivals some of the best from Final Fantasy. The game is backwards compatible on Xbox One so I highly recommend getting it.