Games that can be played on a handheld but aren’t really meant for it (e.g. most stuff on the Steam Deck) doesn’t really count.
Metroid Fusion was a banger. I didn’t even own a Gameboy, but my friend did, and I would trade him half my allowance every week to let me borrow it over the weekend. Many many nights were spent up late under the covers exploring BSL Station.
I recently played Metroid Fusion on an emulator as my first metroid game and it was so good. Legit might buy a switch to buy Metroid Dread with how good Fusion was.
Dread is fantastic but they really focused on the action elements of Metroid. This is fine since there are other games that focus on exploration but the stuff it does really well are things like boss fights. The last boss in particular is phenomenal.
Zelda: Oracle of Seasons (GBC)
Runner up: Pokemon gold/silver (GBC)You like seasons better than Ages?
I liked ages for the complexity of the changes (whole areas being different in past/future vs paths blocked/accessible in seasons) but the overall feel of OoS was more fun to me, especially the more vibrant color pallate changes between seasons
Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker for the PSP was pretty great.
GBA Yoshi’s Island, legit had the hooks in me for years
That and Sonic Advanced
That game was sooooo fun
After playing many hours of yoshis island on SNES as a child i cant imagine playing on such a small screen.
That being said it is such a good game and i appreciate anyone who enjoyed that as much as i have regardless of the console.
The first game I bought for the Nintendo DS was Trauma Center. It really sold me on the idea that new kinds of games were possible with the touch screen and stylus. It was also extremely challenging to get the highest rank on each stage. I spent hours playing the stages over and over trying to get the top ranks. The arcade style gameplay was pretty addictive, and it had a good storyline too.
It’s a tie between Pikmin 4 and Breath of The Wild, I love Pikmin and think about it a lot. Probably broke a world record with how fast I unpacked that game and slid it into my Switch!
Breath of the Wild is a game I really would love to play again as if it were new, it gave me such a sense of adventure and desolation that no other game has achieved. I’ll sometimes boot it up just to lie down and relax to it
I feel like the WiiU being a handheld is a bit of a stretch! Haha
But seriously though, I keep forgetting that the Switch is a handheld. I like playing docked, and it’s too big for me to carry around, generally. But I know I’m in the minority there.
Oh I know Breath of the Wild had a Wii U port haha, I played the Switch version! I’ve actually never played it docked, I love playing it while in bed or while I’m someplace other than home when I have to wait for a while. Isn’t the resolution higher when playing in docked mode?
Technically it didn’t have a WiiU port, only a Switch port. It’s only a port if it came from another console! /semantics lol
I believe the performance is generally better docked. If I’m laying down though, I’ll want something smaller and more mindless like my phone, lol
I think the Zelda Oracle games were pretty rad. Easy games to play, and for the truly committed you had cross progression between the two games to complete quests across Seasons and Ages. The two games had completely different maps and dungeons to explore with different items in each. They were a dual release that weren’t just the same maps with slightly reshuffled enemies like the Pokémon games were. I remember trading my copy of Seasons to my friend for his copy of Ages and then checking in with each other to see where we were and if either of us had discovered any secrets that we hadn’t found in our respective playthrough.
Gonna go with Donkey Kong (1994). Made for a handheld (Game Boy) but also prominently features an enhanced mode enabled by running it on Nintendo’s Super Game Boy accessory for the SNES/Super Famicom (actually mine’s an SGB2–even better).
Boktai 2: Solar Boy Django. You play a vampire hunter with a solar powered gun, and the gimmick is that the GBA cartridge contains a UV sensor so that you’re required to go outside and use real sunlight. It’s such an absurd gimmick, but it works. It works incredibly well and makes it an unforgettable experience.
The first game is alright, but the second is where the series really came into its own.
Phantasy Star Portable on the PSP was really good, I think I wore out my thumbstick playing it.
Dude playing MHFU on PSP with friends was literally peak gaming!
As a member of the original Game Boy generation who had a much-loved stack of carts for the old brick, I feel a bit basic saying the packed-in Tetris was my favorite one but it really was the one I kept going back to for a quick fix.
I also really adored Final Fantasy Adventure (a.k.a. Seiken Densetsu or Mystic Quest) but that was never a quick fix, that was one for sitting down with for a properly long ARPG session.
Castlevania: Circle of the Moon (GBA). Being able to grind XP / gear to compensate for my bad platforming skills was amazing. Also this sparked my love for Metroidvania games.
SMT4 on the 3DS. JRPG perfection imo. I love the SMT combination of monster collecting and Fallout type post apocalypse.
Phantom Hourglass and Spirit Tracks were pretty cool. I played both with the stylus because the DS control pad is tiny as fuck, literally painful to use for more than a few minutes.
Same with the Layton games.