What's an old game innovation/novelty that you enjoyed that has mostly or entirely fallen out of use?
EDIT: Seems dynamic music is back in style in some very recent games, many of which I haven't really played yet. Good.
For me, it's dynamic music, the kind that some games had that adjusted moment by moment to what was happening in the game.
The best-known example of this in the 90s game TIE Fighter, where the moment more enemy (or allied) ships showed up the music would have a little additional flourish to acknowledge the shift in battle. There were pre-battle tension tracks, battle music, complications of battle, grandiose flourishes for the arrival of enemy or even allied capital ships, and victory and failure music all ready to flow into the next seconds of the game.
A lesser-known but still excellent example of this was in Ultima Underworld and its sequel, where drawing a weapon had its own special "preparing for battle" tension music, getting attacked had a jump-out-of-your-skin joltingly sudden musical start that actually scared me as a kid when I got ambushed, music for battles going well, going poorly, victory and defeat.
I wish more games did those sort of second by second musical changes, but they've sort of fallen out of fashion for the most part.
I love that shit! So I'm going to give you 3 modern games that have some of that. Also they're 3 of my favorite games ever:
Pathologic 2, Dredge, and Subnautica
I don't know if you've played any of them, but I can highly recommend all 3 (if you buy Dredge, don't buy either DLC, they're straight up not worth it).
I keep plugging Jump Super Stars in these threads, it's a DS platform fighter that's also a deck-builder, where your deck is actually a page of various-shaped comic panels. You have limited space to work with, stronger things are bigger and might have weird shapes, and adjacent panels can interact to make arrangement even more complex. Super, super cool idea that I've never seen anything like it since.