I would come over if it was possible, because I absolutely love that game. It's almost perfect.
BelieveRevolt
Yes
It doesn't even seem to have Denuvo, so it should be easy to pirate too.
I played the demo of this game as a kid, and for years I couldn't remember the name and thought it was a licensed game based on the movie Clash on the Titans.
There was a company called Parroty Interactive for a few years in the 90s that specialized in making terrible parodies like Pyst and Star Warped. Looking at the list of personnel, they actually had some notable names: Patton Oswalt, Brian Posehn and even John Goodman. Too bad they don't really count as games and are also incredibly unfunny.
Ironseed received a Top Dog award from Home of the Underdogs
Damn, I somehow forgot about that site, used to go there all the time in the early 2000s. I'm sure there's an archive up somewhere, it'd be the perfect website for this thread.
That was Terminator: Future Shock, which was several years later and a more standard FPS instead of open world, but it was a pretty sweet game.
Llamatron is by Jeff Minter, who's been making games for over 40 years and most of them would go in the weird category. His best known game is probably Tempest 2000, but he's made lots of arcade-style games including one that's inspired by the Polybius urban legend and had a NIN music video.
He actually just released a new game a while ago based on the fairly obscure I, Robot arcade game (nothing to do with the Asimov book).
Scott Adams, lol. Douglas Adams was the Hitchhiker's Guide guy.
And because I probably won't have the chance to bring it up in any other thread, there was a DOS point and click game called Kronolog: The Nazi Paradox that was set in an alternate history world where the nazis won WWII, and they released a version for it in Europe (mainly the German market where you weren't allowed to have nazis in media) called Red Hell where they just made the bad guys Soviet.
There's a DOS game based on the first Terminator movie that takes place in an open world, released around 1990. You can play either as Kyle Reese or the Terminator.
In general, Terminator licensed games were in a weird place at the time, since T2 was the hottest movie around, but Ocean had the console rights and Midway had the arcade rights, so companies snatched up the license for the first movie instead.
Todd Howard's going to announce he's in the running to become the new pope.
Pretty sure the Yakuza Remastered collection was $50 for three games originally and now can of course be bought for much less. Sega proven superior once again