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The 15 Best First-Person Shooters on the N64

The 15 Best First-Person Shooters on the N64

The 15 Best First-Person Shooters on the N64
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15. Daikatana
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14. South Park
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13. Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six
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12. Quake 64
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11. Forsaken 64
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10. Turok 3: Shadow of Oblivion
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9. Hexen
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8. 007: The World Is Not Enough
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7. Turok: Dinosaur Hunter
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6. Duke Nukem 64
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5. Quake II
©
4. Turok 2: Seeds of Evil
©
3. Doom 64
©
2. GoldenEye 007
©
1. Perfect Dark
©
The 15 Best First-Person Shooters on the N64
15. Daikatana
14. South Park
13. Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six
12. Quake 64
11. Forsaken 64
10. Turok 3: Shadow of Oblivion
9. Hexen
8. 007: The World Is Not Enough
7. Turok: Dinosaur Hunter
6. Duke Nukem 64
5. Quake II
4. Turok 2: Seeds of Evil
3. Doom 64
2. GoldenEye 007
1. Perfect Dark

The 15 Best First-Person Shooters on the N64

When it comes to 5th generation consoles, perhaps no other piece of console hardware was as defined by the first-person shooter as the Nintendo 64. Despite its family-friendly image and early killer app being the groundbreaking Super Mario 64, the N64 would soon come to be known as the de facto home for console ports of popular PC first-person shooters, not to mention its slew of console-exclusive FPS games that would have a major impact on the future of both the first-person shooter genre and gaming as a whole. There are quite a few great first-person shooters on the PS1, but looking at the best first-person shooters on the Nintendo 64 shows that, at least when it comes to the genre, it's one area where the Big N clearly had the upper hand.

Both the Nintendo 64 and the PlayStation would typically receive ports of popular first-person shooters — largely thanks to advancements in hardware making that possible for the first time — but the Nintendo 64 ones are, with almost no exception, far superior to their PS1 counterparts. In a lot of cases, the Nintendo 64 ports of great FPS titles do them justice, serving as both great reminders of those games' excellence and also adding in new features like original single-player levels or the ability to play the entire campaign in co-op. And say what you will about the Nintendo 64's iconic "Trident" controller, but it helped lay the groundwork for how FPS titles would be controlled on a home console and was a fairly intuitive peripheral.

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