So I've been playing a game I got from Steam called 'This War of Mine', it's not your standard CoD style war game, it's set out like a platform, you don't really kill people and you aren't a walking army. You're a civilian, or group of civilians, caught up in a brutal civil war, you go an scavenge for food, make improvements on your shelter, fend of robbers, and just try to survive.
Everything you do has an effect, one of my party died, and the rest got depressed. We saved a captive from a group of psychopaths, and the team was happy. It's a strangely rewarding and moral game, I stole some food from a weak, starving old couple, and was overcome with guilt, the next night I returned it.
After a while, one of my scavengers got killed by soldiers, the next night, my other one died. I sent out a guy who was good in combat, just to get food to stop us from starving, and some meds, and he got shot. I was down to two men, in winter, freezing and ill. Sickness killed one of them, and a few days later my last guy committed suicide, so that was that. It's a depressing game, but it has moments of happiness and achievement, I'm going to play it again, and see if you can survive the game, or to indeed, do well. I love a good first person shooter, but This War of Mine shows a starker, more realistic side of war, and really grabs you by the balls and drags you in.