1. Jungle Book (SNES)(Platformer)2. Metal Combat: Falcon's Revenge (SNES)(Light Gun Shooter)3. Might and Magic VI (PC)(RPG)4. Revenant (PC)(RPG)5. Neo Turf Masters (NGPC)(Sports)
6. Fatal Fury: First Contact (NGPC)(Fighter)
7. Pac-Man (NGPC)(Action)8. Golden Axe (Genesis)(Hack and Slash)9. Blood and Bacon (PC)(FPS)
10. Gain Ground (Genesis)(Strategy)11. Flicky (Genesis)(Platformer)12. Zombie Shooter 2 (PC)(Top-Down Shooter)13. Phantasmagoria (PC)(Point and Click)14. SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighter's Clash - Capcom Version (NGPC)(Card Game)15. Toonstruck (PC)(Point and Click)16. Riven (PC)(Point and Click)17. Dragon Wars (PC)(RPG)18. Dungeon Hack (PC)(RPG)19. SNK vs. Capcom: The Match of the Millennium (NGPC)(Fighter)
20. Portal 2 (PC)(Puzzle FPS)
21. Goat Simulator: Waste of Space (PC)(Action)
22. Goat Simulator: Payday (PC)(Action)
23. Goat Simulator: MMO Simulator (PC)(Action)24. Goat Simulator: GoatZ (PC)(Action)
25. Goat Simulator (PC)(Action)
26. Streets of Rage 2 (Genesis)(Beat 'Em Up)
27. Bloodstained: Curse of the Moon (PC)(Action Platformer)28. Deadlight (PC)(Platformer)28. Antichamber (PC)(Puzzle FPS)29. S.C.A.R.S. (N64)(Racing)30. Anvil of Dawn (PC)(RPG)31. Earth Defense Force 4.1 (PC)(Action)32. Inherit the Earth (PC)(Point-and-Click Adventure)33. Wolfenstein 3D: Spear of Destiny (PC)(FPS)Spear of Destiny is the official expansion for Wolfenstein 3D. It features 21 levels (including 2 secret levels), additional bosses and enemies, huge levels, and tons more gunplay, making it a nice add-on to Wolfenstein 3D. Plus, it also gives us more of a look at the minds of ID, because the entire team worked on it with the sole exception of John Carmack, who had chosen instead to focus on a new game engine which would become the basis for DOOM.
So, what does Spear of Destiny give you over Wolf3D? Well, more. More Nazis, more bosses, and more castles, catacombs, and caves to fight them in. And at the end, you find the Spear of Destiny and then must face the Angel of Death in a haunted arena to prove you are worthy to wield it.
Unfortunately, this doesn't make for a massive change in gameplay. There is still a limited number of enemy types, and you'll have seen nearly all by the time you beat level 5 if you managed to find the first secret level. To make up for this, eventually ID just starts throwing tons of them at you at a time, forcing you to mow them down and pray that you're quicker on the draw. The boss fights also don't really add much new: you see a boss, you duck in and out of cover and unload on them while avoiding their shots, which have a nice sound effect to go along since nearly all of them use the chain gun. So if you like Wolf3D, well, Spear of Destiny makes for a nice continuation of its style, but SoD shouldn't be your first foray into this era of ID. Play Wolf3D first and then hit up SoD.
Now for all that I've said, the final level of Spear of Destiny shows an evolution in ID's thinking, and it makes for a mini-step towards the DOOM formula. First, you're now in a cavernous Hellscape with blood pools, skulls, and nasty imagery. Second, you now have unkillable ghosts as monsters wandering the halls; take one down, and it'll respawn a short while later, presaging the enemy resurrection of Nightmare Mode in DOOM. Perhaps most important is that the boss is a giant demon who shoots projectiles that you can sidestep. It's the most interesting boss fight because it's different, but it also feels like you're evading a particularly nasty imp, albeit one who will knock off half your health if he so much as wings you. No, he isn't a tough fight, you just sidestep while unloading, but it still marks a pleasant change from the numerous hit-scan enemies you fight up to this point.
I liked Spear of Destiny. I'd recommend it to folks who have played Wolfenstein 3D and enjoyed it. It's also a nice game for anyone who enjoys this era of FPS, though play Wolf3D first if you haven't.