The only recent example I can think of is Death Stranding.
Justdaveisfine
I go to lunch to get away from coworkers. I need that little bit of time to recharge.
There's definitely weird people making games on itch and sometimes in the depths of Steam.
By its very definition weird isn't going to sell to mass market. That being said I do agree that we need more weird AAA or AA games.
They kept rebalancing to chase the hardcore PvPers wants who ended up leaving anyways, started getting pushy with their microtransactions/battle pass (that were added in an update), and they added their Funcom launcher in an update.
Above all of that is there are still some ugly persistent bugs that have been huge problems for years now, many involving thralls which are pretty much required for late game content.
I won't say Funcom did the worst job or anything that far, but they definitely put me in a 'wait and see' state for at least the first few major patches, as that will show what direction they want to take the game and who they're focusing on for feedback.
This is a funky opinion, but I'm holding off on it because of how they handled Conan Exiles.
I suspect we will see a human brain to digital interface. I don't think it will be "downloading minds" or anything, but I could see someone finding a way to plug a specialized camera or mic in to have a full functioning robotic replacement part.
I'm pretty sure they already have the beginning pieces to this, but its too specialized and expensive to do anything commercial with it yet.
I'd probably sell it. There is undoubtedly someone with a project truck looking for a deal on one of those.
Might be fun to rebuild but I'd imagine it'll be in the way more than anything.
The artist who the AI stole this from has a cool vibe*
I had a co-worker who couldn't stop bragging about an angle grinder he got for $5 at Harbor Freight.
I thought that's a pretty good deal, so I went in and got some gardening tools, in particular a shovel that was only a few bucks.
The very first time I stuck that shovel into dirt, the metal head bent and sheared off.
The next day I told my co-worker what happened, and he went on to admit his angle grinder only powered on one time before it broke. "But it was only $5!" He added.
I think everyone gets their "one and done" experience there.
Two of them gave up on it indefinitely before we found the right DM.
This isn't surprising. WotC had been salivating for another hit like BG3. I suspect whoever they talk into making BG4 isn't going to be able to clear the bar that Larian has set.
Hmm. On second thought, maybe games were a mistake.