Best Indie Games On Steam Mac

When it comes to personal computers, the Mac has never been known as a gaming heavyweight: Apple doesn't focus on building machines that have the hard-core processing and graphics power you might find in, say, a Razor PC laptop.

Developed by Gearbox Software, Borderlands 2 is an action role-playing first-person shooter game available on Steam. It serves as the sequel to Borderlands. Released in 2012, the game has been crossing swords with the best co-op games on the site. Find out What are the best co-op games on Steam, including Portal 2, Borderlands 2, Terraria and 42 other top answers suggested and ranked by the Binge.co user community in 2020. Feb 12, 2020  The best indie games always excel at this, and Return of the Obra Dinn is the epitome of that. A mystery taking place on a derelict ship, your mission is to figure out how the crew of this lost.

That said, there are still a number of excellent games available to play on your Mac — especially of the indie variety. Two-person development teams and small studios shine on Apple's laptops and desktops, building stories with smart twists and heart-wrenching endings.

There have been many great indie titles for Mac over the years, especially with the advent of the Steam Store, but here are our all-time favorites.

Braid

I'm not generally the type to get overly invested in a game — I'm more of a book and movie person. But when I picked up Braid in 2009 after an off-hand recommendation from a friend, I found myself completely captivated by its mechanics and story.

On its face, Braid is a simple puzzle platformer: You play a man named Tim searching for a princess across the landscape of a strange world, encountering puzzles as you progress through each level. But the true delight of the game is in its controls: Not only can you run forward, jump, and the like — but you can rewind time at any moment, reversing your decisions and movements. It's a simple but beautiful mechanic and quickly becomes one of the primary ways you can solve the hardest puzzles; all the while, it makes you think about time and movement in a completely different way.

Years after its release, Braid is still considered a masterpiece — and it's not hard to see why. (If you can't — just rewind.)


Firewatch

We've said a lot about the magic of Firewatch on iMore over the last year, but the Campo Santo/Panic collaboration continues to merit praise. The 3D mystery and exploration game, which places you as a firewatch in a national park around the late 1980s, captures the essential beauty of being alone in the U.S. wilderness — and the eerieness factor, too. The voice acting here is also top-tier; this is a game that demands headphones and a wistful spirit.

Indie


Gone Home

Another entry in the first-person mystery genre, Gone Home puts you in the shoes of a student recently returned from a lengthy overseas trip to her family house, only to find it empty — with her younger sister apparently vanished. It's a wonderful example of the mystery and exploration genre, providing just enough of a creepy flair to keep you on the edge of your seat with just a few major jump-out scares.

For all of its intrigue, however, the game's core centers around family, ambition, and love — and paints those feelings with wrenching truths.


Transistor

Modern RPGs are a dime a dozen, but none are painted in quite so stunning a manner as Transistor. Supergiant Games's sci-fi/action game sets you on a path through a futuristic electro-punk city with a mystical weapon and enemies to outwit and defeat. Though shorter than your average Final Fantasy entry, Transistor nevertheless captivates and offers great replay value with its quests and power-ups — though I'd settle for just exploring its beautifully rendered environments.


Stardew Valley

This was an outlier pick for our indie games list courtesy Mobile Nations video producer Justus Perry, but I have to admit that I quickly fell in love with it myself after a few hours. If you're a fan of simulation games but want a little more quirk and a little less 'send your Sim to work for the fortieth time' monotony, Stardew Valley offers you the chance to run your own pixelated farm, interact with the locals, defeat (or join forces with) a possibly evil corporation, explore caverns, and create all sorts of endless weird cooking experiments.

In a month where it's been hard to regularly read Facebook or Twitter, Stardew Valley is an appropriately delightful escape from the real world.


FTL: Faster Than Light

If you've ever dreamed of captaining a starship, it's hard not to love FTL. Subset Games's tactical strategy title puts you in the captain's chair on your way to save the galaxy — if you can make it through any number of insane and sometimes impossible challenges. And those, honestly, end up being the heart of the game: You become attached to your ship and crew — even when you end up accidentally killing them and having to start over.


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Fishing time

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Roll for initiative

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Some of the earliest video games ever were role-playing games. Given the natural ability of computers to crunch stats, and the natural affinity between programmers and Dungeons & Dragons, that's no surprise.

Since then, the genre has come on in leaps and bounds.

Just as the numbers behind the scenes have become more complex, the interfaces above have become prettier and more accessible.

The games have diversified into multiple, confusing sub-genres each with their own vocal fan base. And you can find examples of every kind on Steam.

So here are some of the best, just in case you need a suggestion next time you fancy a bit of dungeon delving.

Baldur's Gate: Enhanced Edition
By Beamdog - buy on PC, Mac, and Linux (£14.99)

Let's start than with the title that transformed role-playing games forever.

In place of the lumbering, stat-driven games of the past, here was a thing that wove character and story into an epic tapestry. And gave us heart-stopping real time combat with a pause button. In fact, it had even more lumbering stats than most of its predecessors. We just stopped caring because everything else was so wonderful.

The sequel, Baldur's Gate 2, went on to greater critical acclaim and is also on Steam. But my heart stays with the original for its comparative simplicity and naive charm. Who want and epic plot that span the cosmos when you could be gutting Gnolls at the behest of a mad Ranger with a hamster fixation?

Pillars of Eternity
By Obsidian Entertainment - buy on PC, Mac, and Linux (£34.99)

Besides, if you really want epic role-playing in the style of Baldur's Gate, you can skip the sequel and pick up this instead. It has the same concepts as the classic Infinity Engine that powered the Baldur's Gate games, but drags everything into the new millennium.

That doesn't just mean sharper graphics and richer sound.

It means ever more complex interactions between the members of your party and non-player characters. It means a novel fantasy world of astonishing richness and imagination bought to life in vivid detail. It means a lot more strategy and tactics to pause-button combat. It means a near-bottomless well of potential play hours.

Wizardry 8
By Sir-Tech Canada - buy on PC and Mac (£6.99)

If you want a glimpse of what role-playing was like before the Infinity Engine, this is the place to find out.

Oh sure, it's got the first-person view common to more modern fare. But after spending several hours poring over stats in the character creation screen you'll come to understand the true meaning of 'old school'.

If you can get past that, however, there's a massive, seventy hour game underneath. Filled with monsters, traps, and even more stat crunching as you level up and kit out your characters.

Legend of Grimrock 2
By Almost Human Games - buy on PC and Mac (£17.99)

Just as detailed stat crunching was starting to feel obsolete, along came a game called Dungeon Master. It dared to do something different. Rather than watching your party from above as they moved round the map, Dungeon Master let you see the world through their actual eyes.

Legend of Grimrock 2 is a love letter to that long-lost title. It eschews modern open world games and goes back to the simple click-move system and grid-based maps that characterised the original. Then it uses those mechanics to build the biggest, hardest most unfathomable puzzles you may ever encounter in a role-playing game.

Forget grinding for stats. This is all about watching your party starve as you stare bleakly at a cryptic riddle intoned by a stone head. It's more fun that it sounds.

The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
By Bethesda Game Studios - buy on PC (£9.99)

Those open-world games that grew out of the old first-person dungeon explorers have gone from strength to strength. The Elder Scrolls series, which sees you free to roam massive and richly detailed fantasy worlds, are the poster child of these titles. And Skyrim is the very best of them.

Although there's a plot to follow, you can ignore it and be whatever you want to be. You can collect potion reagents, hunt monsters, or collect cabbages to earn your keep. You'll want to do it thanks to the incredible scenery, the snow blowing off windswept peaks, the sun shining off walls of ice.

Wherever you go, and whatever you do, you'll find secrets and wonders. But we suggest you do pay some attention to the plot, and not get lost in cabbages.

Fallout 3
By Bethesda Game Studios - buy on PC (£9.99)

The majority of role-playing games are set in sword and sorcery words. But there's no reason for that other than conforming to a stereotype. The mechanics work effectively transplanted to any setting.

Post-apocalyptic open world title Fallout 3 is perhaps the best proof of that. As the anonymous Vault Dweller, you'll emerge into a blasted world that's at once familiar and yet horribly different. Mac computer games free. Add in fine mechanics for survival, character building and a smidgen of black humour and you're looking at an all-time classic.

The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings
By CD Projekt Red - buy on PC, Mac, and Linux (£14.99)

Just as open world settings threatened to overwhelm role-playing games, along came The Witcher 2. It reminded us how a hub-based world and act-based plot could be far more intimate and compelling than open wandering.

Its recent sequel, and critical darling, The Witcher 3 did go open world. But we're sticking with this game. Partly because the newer one requires a beast of a machine to run. Partly because the combat in the older title is harder and more satisfying. But you won't got far wrong with any game in this franchise.

Dark Souls: Prepare To Die Edition
By FromSoftware - buy on PC (£19.99)

Gaming is full of people who extol the virtues of Dark Souls in spite of all the things that make it a nightmare.

The grueling difficulty level. The punishing and often inescapable set-pieces. The design elements like hiding important save points and making one entire level a deadly poisonous bog. Here's the thing though: these people are right.

Your reward for suffering these torments is the satisfaction of having earned your rewards, of knowing you best something really hard. Plus, Dark Souls is one of the few genre blenders that manages to keep intact almost everything satisfying about its inspiration. It's a fully-fledged action role-playing game with combat like a fighting game. Ignore the naysayers and try it.

Bastion
By Supergiant Games - buy on PC, Mac, and Linux (£10.99)

If you can't get with the towering challenge represented by Dark Souls, we could forgive you for getting your action RPG fix here instead. Because while not as unique as the previous entry, Bastion manages to get everything else about the sub-genre just right.

The button-mashing and dungeon exploring, the experience gathering and loot collecting all dovetail snugly together. Not that you'd be looking, anyway, as you're carried along on soothing voice of the game's extraordinary event-based narration.

It's almost like someone reading you your very own fantasy story, with you as the hero, out loud.

Fable - The Lost Chapters
By Lionhead Studios - buy on PC (£6.99)

Reaching a bit further back into the mists of action RPG history is Fable. Given that the genre is now often celebrated for its difficulty, it seems ironic that this was once criticised for its lack of challenge. And the critics were right: it's a title you could play through with one eye closed.

What earns it its spot on the list is the sheer joy of the thing. Exuberance peeps out from between every pixel as you slay bandits, explore haunted ruins, and kick chickens. It's so full of fun, in-jokes, and silly Britishness that playing is like having Peter Molyneux in your front room with a party hat, giving a thumbs up and a cheesy wink.

Except a lot less creepy.

Torchlight II
By Runic Games - buy on PC, Mac, and Linux (£14.99)

It's worth remembering that not all action RPGs are over the shoulder third person. A little title called Diablo gathered elements from classic Rogue-likes and made a new kind of role-playing game. In which collecting treasure started to feel more like mainlining crack cocaine.

None of that series is available on Steam. Which would have been a shame until Torchlight 2 came along and eclipsed the games that inspired it at a stroke. While Diablo became ever more complex, convoluted, and po-faced, Torchlight 2 returned to simpler joys.

Such as clicking on monsters until they explode, then picking through the gore to find what items they dropped.

Also all of these games work great on Powerful Gaming Computers from Fierce PC.

Dungeons of Dredmor
By Gaslamp Games, Inc. - buy on PC, Mac, and Linux (£3.49)

Speaking of Rogue-likes, they're a genre onto themselves and deserving of their own list (Oh, here's one!). But the majority of them also look and feel a lot like classic role-playing games.

Dungeons of Dredmor is perhaps the best of them. It updates the formula of exploring a procedurally generated dungeon turn by turn with some nicer graphics and a healthy dose of humour. Which will leave you laughing right up to the point that permadeath kills your save file hours into the game.

One Way Heroics
By Smoking WOLF - buy on PC (£2.29)

It takes something special to stand out amongst all the Rogue-likes on Steam, but one-way heroics has a unique selling point. As you explore the new procedural world the game has made, darkness is eating it from the other end.

The result is a bizarre blend of turn-based role playing and the forced scrolling common to old-school platform games. It has other innovations, too, like giving you points to spend on upgrading things for your next run.

It might sound odd, but there's nothing else quite like it on all of Steam.

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