
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.

Dawn of War finally returns with a fascinating, if imperfect, twist on the modern RTS.

Eurogamer's verdict on Red Barrels' Outlast 2, a first-person "found footage" horror game set in an Arizona town overrun by religious fanatics.

Introversion, the independent studio once styled as the last of the bedroom coders before bedroom coding became a thing…

For all of its flaws, Sniper Ghost Warrior 3 certainly grows on you.

Sometimes, in the aftermath of an unexpected bereavement, a family will leave their departed loved one's bedroom unchan…

For those who view video games as an adjunct to cinema rather than an alternative, the rise and fall of the interactive…

Tarsier's Little Nightmares is a ghoulish, short-lived masterpiece that takes everything the studio learned about platformers from LittleBigPlanet and thoroughl

If it's artful understatement you're after, look no further than the manual for Mario Kart 8 in all of its glorious ent…

An underestimated action-adventure classic gets the love letter treatment it deserves in Wonder Boy: The Dragon's Trap. Its 8-bit gameplay has aged remarkably w

Cavalier and Tequila Works' terrific, time-recycling puzzler mixes Majora's Mask with The Masque of the Red Death. Eurogamer reviews.

Remember that opening scene in the second X-Men movie where Nightcrawler teleports his way through the White House, kno…

Big Robot's The Signal from Tölva is an intriguing, melancholy spin on familiar open-world design principles that benefits from some superb environmental art an

Drawn To Death is a hand-drawn online shooter from Sony for PS4, created by David Jaffe. It is available as a free download in April 2017 for PlayStation Plus.

Six years on, People Can Fly's brutal, improvisation-driven shooter gets a welcome overhaul. Eurogamer reviews.

Thimbleweed Park is a little bit afraid you won't love it.