
Yakuza 6 delivers both quality and quantity, so saying goodbye to Kiryu doesn't feel rushed


Yakuza 6 delivers both quality and quantity, so saying goodbye to Kiryu doesn't feel rushed

Brawlout caters to the serious Smash fans, but without the charm, variety, or recognizable characters.

It’s a ride that might be worth taking once, but don’t bother going back in when you’re done.

The pieces of a great game are here, but they’re shattered by near-constant bugs, glitches, and technical issues.

Grinding Gear Games has methodically finessed PoE since release, and Xbox One players who drop into this dark fantasy world for the first time will reap the benefits.

Visiting the first entry, enhanced as it is, certainly gave me a greater appreciation for the strides that the series made later.

While the stakes may seem high, Birthday’s fussy moment-to-moment interactions are an evolutionary step backward.

Little Nightmares isn’t a horror game, but it’s filled with some of the most wretched sights I’ve seen in a long time.

While reentering Double Fine’s imaginative world is great, it’s disappointing as both a VR experience and a Psychonauts spinoff.

When everything lines up, For Honor is a brutal and rewarding game that makes you feel like an unstoppable warrior.

Yakuza 0 tries a ridiculous amount of things, and I’ll be damned if it doesn’t almost always succeed in its own weird way.

This is the Dead Rising game that fans of freeform exploration and mayhem wanted from the original. Clock-watchers need not apply

Killing Floor 2 takes its cues from innovators like Left 4 Dead, but the result is more than just a reanimated corpse of games that came before.

Thumper is its own unique beast – a mean, unrelenting animal that I wanted to put down after a few hours.

The Dragon Quest spinoff is a solid action/RPG that, while still a bit rough in a few small areas, is a surprising treat.