Naughty Dog's answer to Mario Kart 64 — Crash Team Racing's drift boost system, 18-course world tour, adventure mode, and tight multiplayer made it the PS1's definitive kart racer.
Sony Games
8 classic games published by Sony.
The commercial peak of the Crash Bandicoot series — Warped's time-travel premise introduces motorbikes, planes, sea-doos, and baby T-rex riding across 30 time-period stages, making it the most varied entry in the trilogy.
Insomniac's PS1 trilogy finale — Year of the Dragon adds four playable friends (Sheila the Kangaroo, Sgt. Byrd, Bentley, Agent 9) with unique gameplay sections, 37 worlds, and 150 dragon eggs to rescue.
Naughty Dog's refinement of the Crash Bandicoot formula — adding the slide, body slam, and super-powered spin makes Crash more capable, and 27 stages with expanded variety mark it as the series' most balanced entry.
Insomniac's refinement of Spyro the Dragon — 30 levels with unique characters, expanded abilities (swimming, headbash, climbing), NPCs with voiced quests, and greater world variety than the original.
The first game to require the DualShock analog sticks — Ape Escape's 204-monkey catching adventure across 26 stages used every feature of Sony's then-new controller in creative ways.
Sony's answer to GoldenEye — Gabe Logan's third-person action-stealth shooter featured a sprawling conspiracy narrative, diverse mission objectives, and over 20 weapons in one of the PS1's best action games.