I remember being bowled over by the AI in the original Half-Life. It really advanced the state of the art, much as Steve Polge's ReaperBot did for the original Quake. Graphics-wise, John Carmack and Tim Sweeney have really impressed me, but Carmack gets extra kudos for open-sourcing his codebases a few years after the games are released.
For sheer addiction factor, I really admire Eugene Jarvis' Robotron 2084 and Defender, as well as Alexei Pajitnov's Tetris.
It seems like nowadays development teams are more admired than individual coders or publishing houses - certainly a change from my youth :) I guess modern game development has become so complex that it's increasingly rare that a single coder can make an impact. (A pleasant exception would be Jonathan Blow's Braid on Xbox Live Arcade.) Hopefully Microsoft's XNA Game Studio will have a democratising impact and there will be a return of 'bedroom coders' producing interesting and challenging output.