
Lego Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight is an endless parade of references and gags that's difficult to resist. Our review.

Last reviewed: Mina the Hollower · 6 days ago

Lego Batman: Legacy of the Dark Knight is an endless parade of references and gags that's difficult to resist. Our review.

This gorgeous medieval RPG continues to be just as prickly, divisive and abrasive as its predecessor.

Shakedown: Hawaii is the latest game from Brian Provinciano, whose previous work, Retro City Rampage, de-made GTA for t…

There's so much to love about Mortal Kombat 11, a kind of Mortal Kombat greatest hits package and certainly NetherRealm…

You've probably played a game like Aggelos before.

The thing that Katana Zero really shares with Hotline Miami, over and above the publisher, the super-violence, the stor…

Let me come clean first: I've never read World War Z the book, or watched World War Z the film. Mainly because I feel t…

From the moment I first heard about Days Gone, I wondered about its reason for existing. With so many open-world titles…

What is it about the Roman empire that makes it so enduringly fascinating, when other historical empires eclipse it in …

I am hopelessly in love with Orik. SteamWorld Quest has heroes instead of classes - a handful of lovable clanking misfi…

Like 80 Days, Inkle's previous game, Heaven's Vault is a piece of interactive storytelling that drops you into a dense …

Listen: there is a classic bit of business in Pac-Man that occurs whenever you go through the wraparound tunnel that ta…

Here's my gaming metaphor of the day: Tropico is like that one friend you have - you know the one - who you see at regu…

An action-packed, if anticlimactic, close to Clementine's journey.

Standing before me is the caretaker of a cemetery. He's old, dirty and lecherous, and he is accused of murder - of deca…

"I see you're no stranger to cruelty," observes a character later on in From Software's predictably astonishing Sekiro:…

The key word here, really, is craft. It's there, first of all, in the aesthetics of this, Good-Feel's second outing wit…