Every child should have some piece of media that is surprisingly traumatic to form the daring edge of their taste, and looking back, this was mine. Beating this game as a child and seeing its utterly unhinged ending definitely sparked something in me. Ruined my life by leading to the chain of events that would lead to me becoming a "Backloggd user" who cares about video games as an "artistic narrative medium" that should have "themes". The patterns that have emerged in how I read games, especially my favorite games (Undertale and Metal Gear Solid 2), seem clearly rooted in my childhood experience with this one work.
It grapples with themes of escapism, divine command, and the nature and value of reality in a way that made me, at the age of maybe eight years old, pause and consider, internalizing concepts that would impact me long after. The literature, television, and film I like has also, most definitely, been affected by this game, as well as, I suspect, the way I’ve grappled with religion and philosophy throughout my young life.
But, there are many kids out there who played this game and yet were not shocked and appalled by the ending to the same degree. They did not have the opportunity to glean themes about escapism, to be hit like a train by its sudden and unexpected darkness without it being suddenly undercut.
Later printings of the game change the ending to be something lighter, less shocking, and less meaningful during its final twist. Now, I realize that I’m getting myself significantly worked up about a ratings complaint directed at a kids game that, for as much as it affected me and thus is a forever 5 star game in my book, is only really “sort of okay” rather than actual, politically significant cases of censorship, but hear me out.
If I didn’t play this game as a kid, if I didn’t grapple with this work of art that I found genuinely challenging, I would not love the medium in the manner that I do, and it’s a deep shame that other kids didn’t get to experience what I did. It’s shocking, flawed, rough, and yet interesting and weird and philosophical in a way that art aimed at children rarely is, and so of course I latched onto it and it made me a different person, it was a whole new frontier of experience.
I guess what I’m trying to say is that, from my own experience of having been a child, children need to be able to experience art that is genuinely a little subversive. I worry that with the overwhelming cultural dominance of companies like Disney and Epic Games and Warner over children’s media, there won’t be as much space for things that are at once childish (this game is immature, easy, and simple) and hugely weird.
Is it really worth getting worked up that my favorite kids game changed its ending? Not really, but I do believe that there is room for me to be a little sad for children who aren’t able to see anything quite like the game’s original ending, which I worry will be more and more children.

If Metal Gear Solid 4 proved anything, which I'm not sure it did, it proved that "ending" Metal Gear Solid was not as simple as telling a final story that wraps up the series' plot by blabbing on about each of its characters, and so Metal Gear Solid V decided upon the opposite.
Metal Gear Solid V is a game that refuses to explain itself. Its narrative lies in quietly humming each of the series' personal and political themes. Its grand tricks are found within how rote it feels when you're told, arbitrarily, to "eliminate" a target, how your eyes glaze over as you select every face and name that speaks Kikongo as it slips from feeling like murder to feeling like mechanics. Its soul rests in the moment you see a "Big Boss is watching you" poster and, in contemplating that you disagree with this use of your face, realize that you have become more symbol than man.
This game is "unfinished" because it never can be finished, there is no conclusion to a story about an unescapable status quo that doesn't contradict either the "unescapable" or "status quo" parts of that phrase.
MGS 1, 2, and 4 tell a story of the next generation, how maybe, just maybe, the next generation can do just a little bit better than us, and how maybe that can rub off onto the future generations. Death Stranding tells a story that implores us not to give us hope in our quest to help fix things right here and right now. But this is a story that is desperate and angry about us right here and right now, its suffering heightening Kojima's other works about healing.
Also, the way it plays totally rules. Genuinely one of the best feeling third person video games I've ever played. I enjoy the immediate sensation of hitting the w key on my keyboard in this game more than entire other games that I like, and it offers the most interesting guard AI and alert system in the series.

My friends have me back into playing Overwatch in the twenty and twenty-second year of our lord after I had long since sworn it off with 80 hours of play time back in 2017. The worst part by far is that I'm genuinely having a pretty good time with it.

I genuinely remember nothing that happens in this game's plot other than the ending being dogshit. The combat is the first game but buggier and there's less of it.

I really don't like my old review of this game and find it pretty embarrassing, if you are looking for it feel free to reach out but I don't want it publicly on my profile

Collectibles giving this sort of resistance towards being collected is such a wildly good idea and the fact that this hasn't been imitated a million times is proof that there is something fundamentally wrong with the game industry.

I love this game about as much as my wrists hate me for playing it.

Gave up on the last level but if we got a modern 2D Mario game this weird and creative I think that I would violently throw up with joy

A game entirely composed of what a normal game would relegate to “in-between” content, and yet consistently better than most any normal game’s peaks.

Essentially a perfect video game

the best game of all time and the ninth star wars movie inserted on opposite ends of the large hadron collider

Sorry haters, the story owns actually

One of the most heartfelt and loving games yet devised.

sorry haters, the controls own actually