There are so many incredible video games to play at this point that it can be hard to see how any of them can be improved. While some may believe in the idea of a perfect game, I’m much more in the camp that everything can always be improved in some fashion – I apply this doubly to myself.

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Some of the greatest games of all time may have gotten perfect ten out of tens, but beauty is fleeting, and sometimes video games lack totally rad additions like ninjas or kickflips. All some games need is one simple change, and everything could have been so much better, trust me, I’m completely serious.

10 Minecraft - A Romantic Subplot

You’re telling me that Minecraft doesn’t need a little more love in it? Good ole Steve needs himself a Sally or a Michael. Blocky Steve’s been out there shaping worlds for years at this point, and it’s about time he got to settle down and find love, should the player deem it the time for that kind of thing.

As long as the love subplot or questline was made optional, it’s not something that can really bug anyone. Just think of all the incredible speedruns that would come from something like that, because I already know we’d be getting the goofiest Marriage% speedruns possible.

9 Portal 2 - A Moon Level

Portal 2 teases us so much with that finale where you shoot a portal to the moon to win the day. It’s almost a slap in the face that there isn’t some kind of secret set of puzzles that are set on the moon with all the unique challenges that would come with something like that.

Throw all the mechanics from puzzles throughout the game up on the moon and see how shifted gravity and potentially other creative changes make them work. It would be like Mario Odyssey’s Dark Side of the Moon, but with a lot more Portal sass.

8 The Last Of Us - Add In Player Choice

The original version of The Last of Us might just be a masterpiece, but there is something that arguably could have bumped up the experience. Adding in some player choice at key moments throughout the story really could have bumped everything up that extra notch.

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Rather than deciding whether or not to high-five Ellie, making big decisions matter would be key, and could be an interesting way to separate the original from Part 2, thus avoiding Joel’s close examination of golf gear. It would have required so much more work, but I’d love to be in control to make the horrendously sad and unavoidable situations – which I think says something interesting about myself.

7 Red Dead Redemption 2 - Don’t Get Rid Of Arthur

Red Dead Redemption 2 might be amazing, but it also did all of us Arthur Morgan fans dirty. You’re telling me I have to spend the whole game with this guy, give him the flyest fits possible, deck out his weapons, and then right at the end, he dies?

Getting to experience more of John Marston’s life, much like his outfits, is cool, but I don’t need marriage proposals and ranch building, I need rootin’ tootin’ action featuring Mr. Morgan. You just grow so attached to his ridiculous hijinx that letting him go feels like you’re on the wrong end of a bad breakup.

6 Pokemon Scarlet & Violet - Travel To Any Region

I know making every region accessible with access to every Pokemon to ever grace the series is a huge stretch to wish for, but come on. My little school-age Pokemon trainer is already trusted enough to wander across a country filled with dangerous Pokemon and evil teams.

If my little guy can make it through all that, and save the Pokemon world from time to time, he can handle a boat or plane ride to all the other regions. I need to see what Brock is getting up to in each game because we all need some more of those jelly donuts of his.

5 The Witcher 3 - No Gwent

Yes, I’m willing to be as controversial as possible by saying I don’t need Gwent in The Witcher 3. You may say that it’s completely optional and at no point a required thing, but that’s not the point, Gwent is just too good to ignore.

How am I supposed to be out there trying to track down Ciri when I know I’m yet to beat a couple of Gwent players who’ve got some spicy cards? Ciri’s gonna stay on that island for a while because I just can’t rest until I am a Gwent master, so unfortunately, it’s gotta go.

4 Skyrim - Stronger Ragdoll Physics

I’ll admit it, this idea is purely because I, like many of you, absolutely love ragdoll physics in games. With how goofy Skyrim can be at times, it just makes sense to boost the ragdoll physics to the absolute extreme.

There is no reason a good dragon shout can’t toss someone from Whiterun to Solitude. I want enemies to be flung deep into the forest when I bash them with a warhammer, and I want my own character to be launched a couple hundred feet only to get up and dust themselves off. Basically, I want Skyrim to play more like a Shonen anime, and I will not apologize for that.

3 Fortnite - Go Back To Basics

This slight change doesn’t even seem that bold anymore as now it seems like it’s becoming a common call. Fortnite should ditch all these fun partnerships that have brought so many characters and abilities to the game to go back to its classic gameplay.

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I don’t need a squad of Captain America, Lara Croft, Naruto, and Goku to roll up in cars and stomp me before I can do anything. Let me go back to being obliterated by someone in the base skin who can build a tower that’ll rival the Empire State Building in two and a half seconds.

2 Persona 5 - An Appearance From Previous Protagonists

There is a lot to love about the multi-hundred-hour RPG that is Persona 5, but it could be even better. All I need are some appearances from folks like Persona 3 protagonist Makoto Yuki and Persona 4 protagonist Yu Narukami.

For those that don’t know, Yu is an absolute Chad of a character, especially if you consider his anime interpretation as his canon personality. We all need to experience Yu and Makoto swooping in to steal Joker’s thunder, if only for the incredible music from each game.

1 Stardew Valley - A World-Ending Event

I know that Stardew Valley is intended to be a peaceful farming experience that can be played at anyone’s leisure but come on, every game is better when the world is ending. The event could be completely optional, to not force players into something stressful, but the option would be great.

Make it something odd like Stardew Valley being invaded by aliens, and it’s up to you to battle them and be the hunky hero that the town needs. Alien events already exist in the game, so it’s time to become the modern Ripley and wipe the floor with some alien scum.

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