Many are the times I've dug out my copy of this game and taken it for a spin. For many reasons.
One of them is the voicework. It's frankly not a game to play with your sound off. Of course, sometimes, the voices can be a little cheesy, but that fits with the narrative, in my opinion. It's something that would make a good weekend night TV series.
The graphics clearly show it's a game from a bygone, pixellated era, but to my eyes, they have aged quite well. Colorful, charming and detailed. From my research into the matter, it seems the city of New Orleans has been rendered quite faithfully and recognizably. While some places aren't quite identical, that was never the point. There's a New Orleans feel nonetheless.
The story has a fantastical feel to it, with protagonists who act the way they do because that's who they are as persons. For instance Gabriel is deeply flawed and reckless, but also so very human. I found myself caring about that little collection of pixels and the way he stumbled through his life. It didn't hurt that he was funny either.
The story itself feeds right into a desire to believe the world is bigger, that there's things outside logical and normal existence. That it's possible to be chosen for something greater.
While Gabriel may be less enthusiastic about that fact than some of us, believably for the sort of person he is, it's still fulfilment of a dream some of us have.
Definitely a game worth playing. While the story is the same every playthrough, it doesn't matter, as it's worth revisiting when the mood takes you.