By Sharon Smith
Winning an Olympic gold medal is something most people will never achieve, but at least there are video games for those looking for something that's almost as intense and exciting as earning a medal. Some games push players to their limits, demanding fast reflexes, careful timing, and sharp thinking. In some difficult games, mistake is a must, and failure is part of the process. Progress comes slowly, but every small victory feels like winning an Olympic gold medal.
These games test more than just reaction speed. They challenge memory, strategy, and patience. Bosses have attack patterns that must be learned, and levels hide traps that punish the slightest misstep. And even experienced players can feel helpless at first.
Spelunky
Navigate Deadly, Ever-Changing Caves Where Every Step Can Kill
- Players explore deadly, randomly generated caves filled with traps, treasure, and monsters as a spelunker.
- Every run is unpredictable, and death means restarting from the beginning.
Spelunky is a tough but exciting adventure that mixes old-school platforms with random surprises. Rather than moving through the same maps each time, the game builds each cave differently, so even experienced players can’t rely on memorizing patterns. This makes Spelunky feel like a game that doesn’t want players to succeed.
In the game, a spelunker, who is basically a cave explorer, drops into deep underground tunnels where treasure and danger sit side by side. Gold and gems are tucked into corners, and saving people trapped in the caves brings rewards, but every step carries risk. Enemies such as snakes, spiders, and cavemen appear randomly and can kill a player quickly. Hazards like spikes, falling rocks, arrow traps, and pits mean every moment needs careful attention. What makes Spelunky fun and frustrating at the same time is that when someone dies, they have to restart from the beginning. So no progress carries over except what they learned about the game’s systems.
Super Meat Boy
Dash, Jump, and Wall-Slide Through Brutal Platforming Levels
- Fast-paced platformer where Meat Boy must dodge saws, spikes, and hazards to rescue Bandage Girl.
- Over 300 brutal levels demand perfect timing and tiny margins for error.
Super Meat Boy is built around pure movement skills. There is no exploration, no long story breaks, and no safety net. Every level is a compact challenge designed to test reaction speed and precision. Players are Meat Boy, a tiny but very fast character who can sprint, jump, slide on walls, and launch himself across narrow gaps. These simple actions feel smooth and responsive, which is important because the game expects near-perfect control.
The real difficulty in Super Meat Boy comes from the level design. Almost every stage is packed with spinning saw blades, collapsing floors, missile launchers, spikes, or pits that kill instantly. Many levels can be completed in just a few seconds, but only if the player reacts correctly from start to finish. One late jump or slightly mistimed wall slide usually leads to death. When Meat Boy dies, the level restarts immediately. This quick reset encourages repeated attempts without frustration. After beating a level, the game replays every failed run at once, showing Meat Boy dying in different ways. This goes to show that failure is expected and learning comes from repetition.
Cuphead
Learn Boss Patterns or Die Trying
- Cartoon-style run-and-gun boss rush where Cuphead and Mugman collect soul contracts to repay a deal with the Devil.
- Each boss fight has unique patterns and mechanics that have to be learned through repetition.
Cuphead does a great job of hiding its extreme difficulty behind cheerful cartoon art. At first glance, the game looks playful, but the challenge becomes clear within minutes. Most of the game is built around boss battles rather than long levels. Each boss has multiple phases, and every phase introduces new attack patterns that must be learned through trial and error.
Cuphead has weapons and charm upgrades that slightly change how fights play out, but none of them remove the challenge. Even with upgrades, success depends on learning enemy behavior and reacting correctly. There is a Simple mode, but it removes later boss phases and does not count as completing the game’s main objectives. To truly finish Cuphead, players must win on the standard difficulty.
Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice
No Difficulty Settings, So It’s Difficult From the Start
- Third-person action-adventure that’s big on precise sword combat, posture breaking, and perfect deflections.
- No difficulty settings.
Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice is quite different because it forces players to unlearn habits from other action games. Instead of slowly chipping away at enemy health, combat revolves around breaking an opponent’s posture. This happens by attacking relentlessly and, more importantly, deflecting enemy strikes with perfect timing. Blocking too early or too late usually leads to heavy damage or death. Boss encounters are direct, intense duels where reading attack cues and reacting instantly is the only way to survive.
What makes Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice so hard to beat is its lack of traditional role-playing shortcuts. There are no difficulty settings, no over-leveling to overpower enemies, and very limited ways to improve raw stats. Progress depends almost entirely on player skill. If a boss feels impossible, it usually means the timing and rhythm of the fight have not yet been fully understood.
Nioh 2
Encounter Powerful Yokai Enemies
- Players create their own character and fight human warriors and deadly yokai using deep, skill-based combat systems.
- Mixing fast sword combat with supernatural powers.
Nioh 2 is one of those soulslike games with a steep learning curve. Players choose their character’s appearance, weapons, armor, and skills, but that freedom comes with complexity. Weapons behave very differently from one another, and mastering even one takes time. On top of that, enemies use varied attack patterns that must be studied closely. Charging in without a plan usually leads to fast defeat.
One of the toughest enemies in Nioh 2 is the yokai enemies. These monsters create dark zones that slow stamina recovery, making fights far more dangerous. To counter this, players must use special abilities like Yokai Skills and Burst Counters. These mechanics reward precise timing, but using them incorrectly often results in heavy damage. Learning when to take risks and when to back off becomes a constant mental test.
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This article originally appeared on GameRant and is republished here with permission.