1. Oni - PC
2. Donkey Kong 64 - N64
3. Yoshi's Story - N64
4. Neverwinter Nights: Shadows of Undrentide - PC
5. Forsaken 64 - N64
6. Bloodrayne: Betrayal - PSN
7. Fire Emblem Seisen no Keifu - SNES
8. Fire Emblem Shin Monshō no Nazo: Hikari to Kage no Eiyū - Nintendo DS
9. Valkyria Chronicles 3 - PSP
10. Ready 2 Rumble Boxing - DC
11. Rise of the Tomb Raider - PC
12. XCOM 2 - PC
13. Shadowrun Hong Kong Bonus Campaign - PC
14. Fire Emblem Fates: Conquest - 3DS
15. Fire Emblem Fates: Birthright - 3DS
16. Lagrange Point - NES
17. Fire Emblem Fates: Revelations - 3DS
18. Cybernator - SNES
19. Outwars - PC
20. Resident Evil - GC
21. Resident Evil 2 - GC
22. Resident Evil 3 - GC
23. Resident Evil Code Veronica X - GC
24. Dino Crisis - PSX
25. Resident Evil 5 - PC
26. Dark Souls 3 - PS4
27. The Banner Saga 2 - PC
The second entry in The Banner Saga trilogy (presumably; the current storyline should be wrapped up in the next game), BS2 is mostly an iteration on what came before. You still have the same pretty animation and backgrounds with that mash up of Oregon Trail and Final Fantasy Tactics. The main change is that the level cap has been raised from 5 to 10. This gives two things: when you level to six you get a second personal ability and there are new three point passive talents unlocked by maxing out a particular stat. The second passive is usually the ability to select from one of a few abilities that related units have; think of the various sub classes of the basic shield and axe human. However, the main story units get unique second abilities, some of which are ok while others are hilariously overpowered (hi2u Alette!). And if you imported a save all your units have the same stats/kills as before, so you can potentially get a jump and level a few units immediately.
Speaking of the save import, it copies over all your characters, items, and choices. The nature of the story means that many of the choices don't matter beyond their initial effects, but there are callbacks in the dialog, and one choice from near the end of the previous game is reflected in this one (I'm avoiding spoilers). I wouldn't be surprised to find that the devs plotted out all the important choices when they started on the first one and then let it be chopped up into the three games. Storywise it's clear that they were always planning the trilogy. This entry doesn't answer too many questions, but it does build on a lot of the bits you were starting to see in Banner Saga 1. The nature of what's going on starts to be much more apparent, though only at the very end do you start to really get an idea of what the true story going on is. It ends on a pretty major cliffhanger; think of the Star Wars trilogy. The first game ends with more to come, but there was a pretty clear beginning and end of a journey. It stands alone fairly well. The second game definitely needs the final payoff from the upcoming third game.