Before the years of Generation X, video games were little more than toys that were kept in the closet with the rest of the kid's stuff, if they existed at all. Not only did video games explode in the years between 1965 and 1981, but Generation X was also the perfect age to witness the rise of Nintendo in the early 1980s.

RELATED: Hidden Messages In Classic Video Games

Boomers were mostly too old to get hooked on video games, at least back in the 1970s and 1980s when cable TV and VHS were the new and exciting things for grown-ups. The Atari was always lurking in the background, however, and when the console wars began the following decade, the digital genie was out of the bottle and never going back.

8 Duck Hunt (1984)

Duck Hunt

The genre of the first-person shooter was one of the most popular types of video games in the 1990s, but it all started with Duck Hunt. Plenty of early Nintendo gaming consoles included a light gun back in the day, so most Boomers bought this completely by accident for their Gen X kids.

RELATED: Nintendo Games That Bombed At Launch But Became Cult Classics

What followed was a surprise hit that took a satirical and funny take on the concept of hunting games. Even at the highest difficulty setting it was an easy game, and the sound of that dog laughing is a sound that almost all Gen Xers recognize.

7 Super Mario Bros. (1983)

0_0002_Super Mario Bros

The kids that had a copy of Duck Hunt that included the light gun, Rob the Robot, and two more games, one of which was Super Mario Bros. Older Gen Xers would have recognized that this was a sequel to a popular two-player arcade game, Mario Bros, and this one had some similar features. One important difference is that a second player was optional as opposed to a requirement.

This colorful, exciting, and strange video game made Nintendo a household name and brought terms like "sidescroller" and "2D platformer" into the English lexicon.

6 Ghosts N' Goblins (1985)

GhostsNGoblinsNES

An early example of the horror genre, Ghosts n' Goblins paved the way for titles like Castlevania in later years. It took most players' by surprise with its unforgiving level of difficulty, simple but exciting plot, and truly frightening design and setting.

RELATED: Video Games Every Dracula Fan Should Play

For those that noticed or even cared about the plot, it was about the brave Sir Arthur and his fight through a hellscape filled with zombies, demons, ghosts, and other monsters to reach Astaroth, also known as Satan or Lucifer. Another bit of interesting trivia is that once a player beats the boss at the end, they're sent back to the beginning because the first run is an "illusion." That's a true story and it happens.

5 Asteroids (1979)

Asteroids arcade gameplay

Generation X got the best of both worlds when it came to video games. There weren't just consoles and home games like Pong to enjoy but also the selection in the arcade, a holdover from the Boomer years when video games were something you left the house to do.

Asteroids was one of the games that were ported to the Atari home consoles, and it was the type of game that didn't need a storyline, a main character, a soundtrack, or even different colors. Its simplicity was addictive, and its unique design of a stationary point that needs defending as opposed to an offensive position would continue with other games like Galaga and Centipede.

4 The Legend Of Zelda (1986)

Link earns Triforce Piece

Almost every MMORPG or standalone fantasy video game can trace its roots back to The Legend of Zelda, and Generation X was the first to play it. It had some RPG elements but it was mostly an adventure game, and it worked so well that a massive franchise of books, maps, and a whole library of Zelda and Link's adventures would spring from this humble root.

It wasn't just the collection of weapons and gear or exploring the vast and mysterious forest where players would find themselves with little or no backstory. Players who took the incentive to read the rather thick manual learned some of the lore of Hyrule along with the reasons and history behind some of the wacky names and strange locations scarred throughout the forest.

3 Castle Wolfenstein (1981)

Castle Wolfenstein 1981
Castle Wolfenstein 1981

Most people think of Castle Wolfenstein as the predecessor to Doom, but that's only where the storyline is concerned. Both games are concerned with infiltrating Nazi strongholds and stealing or discovering powerful artifacts, but one is a pure FPS while the other is a stealth game.

RELATED: The Best MS-DOS Shooters

The original Castle Wolfenstein was one of the first games in the stealth genre. It was a paradigm shift for players that were used to space shooters or point-and-click adventure games. Its legacy would continue with other games that used the element of stealth in the gameplay.

2 Hero's Quest (1989)

hero's quest sierra

Computer games were catching up to their console counterparts, and with some exceptions, PC gamers were the ones playing puzzle, stealth, and point-and-click adventure games. These would evolve into much more complex games, like those in the Elder Scrolls franchise, to include professions, crafting, and other ways to customize each character.

Hero's Quest was inspired by the first drafts of tabletop Dungeons & Dragons, in which players could choose between the classes of Fighter, Mage, or Thief. The class of the main character determined their skills and talents and also affected how the storyline was going to unfold.

1 Final Fantasy (1987)

final fantasy original nintendo

Fans of this popular franchise still look for ways to play the very first game in its original form, despite its age and primitive design. There are plenty of remastered versions of the old games and some of them were never released in North America, but everyone who had an NES in 1987 had a chance to play the very first one.

What has evolved into one of the biggest and most profitable franchises in the media universe started with Final Fantasy. It was one of the very first turn-based RPG games that let players build characters and was released late enough that some of the Millennials got to experience it as well.

MORE: Best Found Families In Gaming