Summary

  • Video games rewrite history in bold and intriguing ways, blending reality with imagination.
  • We Happy Few creates an unsettling alternate 1960s England engulfed in forced happiness and drug use.
  • Wolfenstein: The New Order imagines a world where Nazis won WW2, creating terrifying advancements and compelling storytelling.

Video games love to mess with history. Whether they're reimagining major events or putting a bizarre twist on familiar stories, some games are downright bold when it comes to rewriting the past.

Instead of just setting the stage, they grab historical events by the collar, shake them up, and spit out a world that's both familiar and entirely alien. Sometimes it’s horrifying, other times it’s just plain weird, but it’s always intriguing. These are some of the best games that dared to flip history on its head, creating worlds where reality takes a back seat and imagination drives.

6 We Happy Few

A Dystopian Joyride Through Alternate England

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We Happy Few
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Released
August 10, 2018
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SUBSCRIPTION
DIGITAL
PHYSICAL
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ESRB
M For Mature 17+ due to Blood, Strong Language, Suggestive Themes, Use of Drugs and Alcohol, Violence
Genre(s)
Adventure, Stealth

There’s something uniquely unsettling about the world of We Happy Few. Set in an alternate 1960s England, this game takes the swinging sixties and smothers them in a fog of forced happiness. Imagine a world where everyone is perpetually cheery, not because life is good, but because they’re all hooked on a hallucinogenic drug called Joy. It’s like if Orwell’s 1984 had a brightly colored cousin who just can't stop smiling.

The game follows three characters, each dealing with the fallout of refusing Joy, and in doing so, seeing the grim reality of their lives. The world they live in is one where England lost World War 2, leading to German occupation and a whole lot of trauma the population would rather forget—hence the drugs. The town of Wellington Wells is a blend of vintage aesthetics and creepy vibes, and the contrast between the facade of happiness and the horror lurking underneath makes for a memorable experience.

What’s remarkable is how We Happy Few doesn’t just rewrite history—it rewrites how society copes with it. It asks uncomfortable questions about the lengths people will go to escape guilt and despair. Beneath its bizarre and colorful presentation, there’s a chilling commentary on how society can break when faced with the unbearable.

5 Resistance: Fall Of Man

World War 2, But With Aliens

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Resistance: Fall of Man
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Released
November 17, 2006
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ESRB
M For Mature 17+ due to Blood and Gore, Intense Violence, Strong Language
Genre(s)
FPS

Resistance: Fall of Man doesn’t just change history—it obliterates it with a plague of alien monstrosities. Instead of WW2 tearing through Europe, an alien race called the Chimera sweeps across the continent in the 1950s, turning humanity into grotesque bio-weapons. Britain becomes the last bastion of hope as the rest of Europe falls to this unstoppable force.

The protagonist, Sergeant Nathan Hale, battles otherworldly horrors while dealing with his own infection that threatens to turn him into one of the aliens. The game’s environments are a gritty mix of war-torn England and twisted alien technology, making it feel like a sci-fi horror flick hijacked the Second World War.

Resistance Ranked Hale Grayson Riley
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The brutal realism of the weaponry clashes with the grotesque Chimeran tech, giving combat a grounded-yet-futuristic feel. It’s like Saving Private Ryan featured an alien invasion midway through. The lore is deep, too, explaining how the Chimera were originally humans mutated by an ancient virus, adding a disturbing layer to the story.

4 The Order: 1886

Steampunk Knights Against Mythological Horrors

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The Order: 1886
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7 /10
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Released
February 20, 2015
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DIGITAL
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ESRB
M For Mature 17+ due to Blood and Gore, Intense Violence, Nudity, Sexual Content, Strong Language
Genre(s)
Third-Person Shooter

If Victorian London wasn’t already atmospheric enough, The Order: 1886 cranks up the moodiness with werewolves, steampunk weaponry, and an ancient order of knights sworn to protect humanity. This isn’t just any London—it’s a city gripped by both technological progress and the primal terror of supernatural creatures.

The titular Order has been around for centuries, tasked with battling half-breed monsters that blend human and animal traits. The game’s lore cleverly intertwines historical events with its dark fantasy narrative. Nikola Tesla even shows up as the group’s gadget maker, crafting arc lightning guns and thermite rifles like he’s moonlighting as Q from James Bond.

It’s not just about monsters and gadgets. The story digs into themes of duty, corruption, and the clash between tradition and progress, as the Order’s once-noble purpose becomes tainted by secrecy and internal conflict. It’s a unique twist on Victorian history, blending myth and technology to create a world both grim and fascinating.

3 Fallout 4

A Retro-Futuristic Apocalypse That Never Left The '50s

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Fallout 4
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9 /10
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Released
November 10, 2015
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SUBSCRIPTION
DIGITAL
PHYSICAL
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ESRB
M FOR MATURE: BLOOD AND GORE, INTENSE VIOLENCE, STRONG LANGUAGE, USE OF DRUGS
Genre(s)
RPG, Action

What if the Cold War paranoia of the 1950s never stopped, and nuclear war actually broke out? That’s the premise behind Fallout 4, a game where America’s post-WW2 obsession with atomic power led to a world frozen in retro-futurism. Instead of moving past the atomic age, society doubled down on it, resulting in a pre-war world full of gleaming chrome and 1950s optimism—right up until the bombs fell.

After emerging from Vault 111 two centuries later, the protagonist finds a world that’s both a ruined wasteland and a relic of mid-century Americana. The fusion of futuristic technology and old-world charm defines the aesthetic, from rusted soda machines to combat robots stuck in a time warp.

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It’s not just about the visuals. The game’s factions, from the idealistic Minutemen to the technocratic Brotherhood of Steel, all reflect different interpretations of how humanity could rebuild after the fall. It’s a chaotic reinterpretation of America, where history didn’t just end with the war—it splintered into fragmented ideologies trying to find their way back.

2 Homefront: The Revolution

When America Falls

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Homefront: The Revolution
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4 /10
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Released
May 17, 2016
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DIGITAL
PHYSICAL
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ESRB
M For Mature 17+ due to Blood, Drug Reference, Intense Violence, Strong Language, Suggestive Themes
Genre(s)
FPS

What if North Korea became a global superpower and invaded the United States? Homefront: The Revolution runs with that grim scenario, showing a war-torn Philadelphia occupied by the Greater Korean Republic. The bleak urban landscapes are riddled with propaganda, surveillance drones, and a population too beaten down to resist.

It’s a guerrilla war, fought in the alleys and crumbling buildings of a city that’s lost its identity. Armed with scavenged weapons and makeshift gear, resistance fighters strike from the shadows. The game’s story is a bitter commentary on how easily a powerful nation can become the oppressed, a theme that’s as bleak as it is thought-provoking.

1 Wolfenstein: The New Order

A World Under Nazi Control

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Wolfenstein: The New Order
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8 /10
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Released
May 20, 2014
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SUBSCRIPTION
DIGITAL
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ESRB
M For Mature 17+ due to Blood and Gore, Intense Violence, Strong Language, Strong Sexual Content, Use of Drugs
Genre(s)
FPS, Stealth, Action, Adventure
Wolfenstein The New Order Press Image 1

The Nazis won World War 2. That’s the horrifying premise of Wolfenstein: The New Order, where the Third Reich has dominated the world through brutal force and twisted science. B.J. Blazkowicz, the series’ long-standing protagonist, wakes up after 14 years in a coma to find a world where resistance is all but extinguished.

The game doesn’t just show a Nazi-controlled world—it imagines the terrifying advancements they could have made, from moon bases to robotic super soldiers. It’s a relentless fight to retake what was lost, combining pulpy action and surprisingly heartfelt storytelling.

Blazkowicz’s grit and unyielding spirit make him a compelling hero in a world that desperately needs one. It’s a cathartic, explosive, and unapologetic take on rewriting history with a big, angry fist.

A cutscene featuring characters in Eternal Sonata and Fighting a battle in Operation Darkness
8 Bizarre Alternate History RPGs

The concept of alternate history games is nothing new, but these strange RPGs take the idea to a whole new level.