Are you mom enough to rank games?

Time Magazine is a tabloid, clickbait before internet teens learned to sling the word at anything that didn’t mesh with their ideology, but because it has a veneer of respectability owed to its near 100-year run, it continues to make bolder and bolder claims about the world to try and stir itsdecreasing magazine circulation. I can’t speak to 100 years of Time, but the last decade plus has been a mess.

Sometimes it leads to fun, like an ill-advised cover featuring a goofy virtual reality founder the internet canphotoshop into oblivion.

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Most of the time it just pisses people off. In 2013 Time led with,The Me Me Me Generation: Millennials are lazy, entitled narcissists who still live with their parents. Why they’ll save us all., which more thoughtful minds took to task.The AtlanticWire‘s Elspeth Reeve found a carbon-copy 1976New Yorkarticle called “The ‘Me’ Decade.” Hell, Time itself already shat on Generation X (of which the Me Me Me Time writer is a member) with 1990stwentysomething, writing:

They have trouble making decisions. They would rather hike in the Himalayas than climb a corporate ladder… They crave entertainment, but their attention span is as short as one zap of a TV dial… They postpone marriage because they dread divorce.

A battle scene in Battlefield 6 Open Beta

Double hell, in 2007 Time’s cover story was “It’s all aboutme” about “China’s twentysomethings.” It’s just decades of lazily scaring the olds with the rehashed campfire tales of the depravity of the youngs. “Millennial” just rolls off the tongue better than “twentysomethings,” which is why Time continues to beat the drum with hard-hitting articles like last week’s,It’s the Millennials’ Fault you may’t Take a Vacation. Time isn’t alone, mind. It’s its own genre. See:

Why aren’t millennials buying diamonds?https://t.co/yMmkzFUFBbpic.twitter.com/a822ggVZrK

capcom evo moment 37

— The Economist (@TheEconomist)June 28, 2025

Uhm, how about because everyone under 35 is scared and poor as moneyed interests fuck over regular-ass people?Here’s Martin Jacques atThe Guardianoffering a much more thoughtful answer to the question than, “young people are inherently worse.”

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In the period 1948-1972, every section of the American population experienced very similar and sizable increases in their standard of living; between 1972-2013, the bottom 10% experienced falling real income while the top 10% did far better than everyone else. In the US, the median real income for full-time male workers is now lower than it was four decades ago: the income of the bottom 90% of the population hasstagnated for over 30 years.

Over 30 years, you say? Hmm, when is the most-agreed upon “millenial” cutoff? 1981? Why, that’s[pulling out comically large calculator]over 30 years ago, by gum!

A snap of the upcoming MESA update in PEAK

Meanwhile, Time:

Time won’t stop. This is what Time is. Here’s a slideshow with 10 reasons why the ’00s are “the worst decade ever.” Ever! Number five is, “Tsunami, December 2004.” Please cop this beautiful wording:

Amid the U.S.’s debacles, Mother Nature decided to shrug, and an earthquake off Sumatra sent enormous waves all across the Indian Ocean. Perhaps 200,000 people were killed in a matter of hours.

Naked Snake sneaking around in MGS Delta.

Perhaps! Perhapsies!

Remember when a Time cover insisted you owed $42,998.12 to the United States’ national debt? LA Times remembers:Time’s debt scare cover story is a journalistic — and economic — train wreck. The Washington Post remembers:Time magazine’s national debt cover story isn’t just misleading. It’s most likely ineffective too., andA guide to one of the most sensational claims Time magazine has ever made.

BUT WHAT ABOUT VIDEO GAMES?

I admit this was a long wind up, even for me, and the Palmer Luckey/Oculus VR cover story probably wasn’t enough to tip the preceding ratio of “video game related” to “ah hell, loony ‘ol Hansen’s on one again, innit?” in my favor andthat’s fine.

But honestly, this is how thrown I was by Time’sThe 50 Best Video Games of All Time(alltime, hahaha!) list.

Battlefield 6 aiming RPG at a helicopter

Lists are already kind of stupid, but they can make sense in a localized context.10 cheapest beers relative to alcohol percentage I can buy in this particular liquor store right now, for example. That’s a good, useful list. Sometimes it’s a fair framing device for disparate, abstract ideas, like,The best ideas for the Call of Duty: Ghosts sequel. Sometimes they can take the piss out of online publishing, like,Great alternative hamburger toppings that wouldn’t go so well in a first-person shooter. Sometimes they aren’t really lists at all and that’s never addressed, haha, fooled you into reading! (22 (probably) games that are way harder than Dark Souls). None of us are free from sin and sometimes arguing whyFinal Fantasy XIIkicksFinal Fantasy VII‘s dumb ass is fun, if pointless.

Lists get especially grating and content mill-y when their scope expands too far. Or when list as format overrides content. I’d read a “The 100 Greatest Films of All Time” book with short essays by great film writers or filmmakers. At that point it’s less about a list and more about reading a collection of good writing about good movies. But Time gives each game a paragraph of flavor text, treading much closer to the diminutive “listicle” that serves nothing, aside from “content.”

BO7 key art

Here is Time’s innocuous intro to the subject:

For some, it’s hard to imagine a world without video games—thechup-chup-boopof an arcade legend likeSpace Invadersor the growling “Finish Him!” inMortal Kombatcan be as evocative as a Michael Jackson or Beatles tune.

I’ve never seenSpace Invaders‘ onomatopoeic representation typed as chup-chup-boop and already I am inconsolable.

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A “7 favorite films” chain letter was circulating Twitter earlier this month and Andy Levy nailed the quasi-performative format people default to when quickly reducing such scope into digestible form. I think it has a lot to do with recency bias (“what are some recent things I really like?”) and then a sudden fear of, “Oh, man, I look like an uncultured ass! What are some canonically Good Things!?” followed by, “Uh, crap, this is the default create-a-character Good List, I look like a tool!” and so on and so forth.

okay this is definitely the best#fav7filmslistpic.twitter.com/nSTa1DTb6I

Milla Jovovich portraying Alice in Resident Evil 2002, wearing a red dress and holding a gun in her hand.

— andy levy (@andylevy)Jun 07, 2025

Of course a “50 Greatest Games” list by a mainstream publication, then, will look like a stuffy, established literary canon (Tetris,#1!) pockmarked by the modern (Dota 2#49,Angry Birds#48), with no real internal logic driving the thing. Greatest on its own merits (GoldenEye 007is #22,Perfect Darkdoesn’t rank,Halo: Combat Evolvedis #25)? Greatest for its cultural significance and progeny? This list isn’t too concerned. Here’s a paragraph on each, slightly longer than a Netflix plot synopsis.

Tetrisis #1, butPongis #40.Castlevania(#39) rates, butSymphony of the Nightdoesn’t. NoMetroidgame makes it.The Legend of Zeldais #7, butOcarina of TimeandSuper Mario 64are numbers 3 and 2, which really just feels like pandering to those dang Me Me Me millenials.

Rise of the Tomb Raideris the 18th greatest video game of all Time.