This game’s strangeness scarcely counts as a unique spin on a familiar gameplay loop.
‘Hell Is Us’ Review: In This Haunting Game About War, the Only Freedom Is the Player’s
Hell Is Us searingly attests to the atrocity of wartime.
This is a competent shooter with occasional highs and frustrating lows.
The game invites you to explore its world at your own speed, and on your own terms.
Origins boasts endlessly addictive gameplay across its campaign, but it falls short narratively.
The developers have truly gone out of their way to make the settings reactive to the player.
The game is memorable for the way that it presents war as ugly, grim, and devastating.
Despite its name, Endless Ocean Luminous is frustratingly shallow.
‘Terminator: Resistance – Complete Edition’ Review: An Immersive Love Letter to a Franchise
With this remaster, Resistance gets a second wind as a truly “complete” experience.
The game is committed to channeling the spirit of a landmark horror film.
It only helps that Dark Descent so ably captures the look and tone of the Alien films.
Diablo IV pushes the series’s signature formula in thrilling directions.
Lego 2K Drive Review: An Inviting Racer with Unfortunate Microtransactions Under Its Hood
This competent arcade racing game is let down by its difficulty and microtransactions.
‘Kirby’s Return to Dream Land Deluxe’ Review: An Affectionate Remaster with a New Epilogue
The game overflows with joy and happiness via relatively calm and easygoing gameplay.
Ghostbusters: Spirits Unleashed Review: A Too-Small Asymmetrical Multiplayer Experience
Beyond its strong foundation, there’s a sense that Spirits Unleashed is a missed opportunity due to its narrow focus on the architecture of the asymmetrical multiplayer.
The game isn’t just a nostalgia-driven throwback, as it also marks the evolution of a genre.
The game’s faithfulness to its brutal and campy source material isn’t enough to make up for a litany of bugs and problems.
Consistently, the world of Dying Light 2: Stay Human overwhelms us in lockstep with the dazzlingly dense gameplay.
Nonsensical characterization is the order of the day throughout House of Ashes.
Remedy’s Alan Wake certainly feels its age, even with a new coat of paint, and that’s okay.