RevRico said:
Appleseed said:
Get an emulator. Nintendo for days.
This really is the right answer. What you wanna play? NES, SNES, genesis, 3DO, Virtual Boy, N64, etc etc? Grab an emulator, find a Rom pack, and relive your childhood. MAME will get you old arcade games, Atari emulators abound if you want to blow your kids mind.
Sure the graphics suck, but at least the games are complete and finished unlike anything that's been released in the last 5ish years.
They're also free.
Ummm, I'm pretty sure Nintendo still exists as a company, which means they aren't abandonware.
So by "free" I think what you really mean is "stolen."
The OP mentioned gaming on a PC rather than a console. I tried Skyrim on my PS4, and using the controller, it had a fatal flaw I couldn't get past: pushing down axially on the joystick was mapped to perform a 180d about-face, and there was no way to unmap that. Which meant that pretty much any time I got into combat, the moment there was any tension, I found myself turning my back on my opponent and getting slaughtered.
That may just be an idiosyncrasy of my playing style, but it was enough to render the game unplayable for me. On a PC it probably isn't an issue. It did look beautiful and what I played was very non-linear; there were lots of opportunities for side quests of many different types. Taking those side quests (or not) did have local repercussions in what happened in the world, too.
Myst and Riven are both good, and as someone said, Myst was remastered in recent memory, so it should run on a modern computer.
I've never played it, but there is a fairly open-world game from 3-4 years ago called Generation Zero where you are alone in an abandoned Scandinavian countryside, set in the 1980s. You need to fight a guerilla war against a mysterious enemy. It's definitely combat-oriented, but more of the stealth variety than plain bulk frontal assault. Not particularly linear, and very atmospheric.
There is also a game set in Iceland called Spirit Of The North, where you play a wild fox exploring your environment, and gradually become involved with a nature spirit fox. Pretty, non-linear, and without dialog or narrative. We have it for the Switch, but haven't played it yet. However, I have heard criticism of the controls, unfortunately.