
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.

Laden with features and options, Project Cars rewards patient players with an authentic and exciting circus of motorsport.

Eventually, Kerbal Space Program becomes a game about triumph. Getting into space. Landing on the moon. Mastering physi…

If last year's The Evil Within saw Resident Evil creator Shinji Mikami reclaiming the survival horror gameplay he popul…

War for the Overworld isn't Dungeon Keeper 3 but, buggy as it can be, it sometimes gets close.

Why would Sonya Blade fall in love with Johnny Cage? Mortal Kombat X does not even attempt to solve this riddle, choosi…

An improvement over its predecessor, with some welcome new ideas, this is lacking in depth and long term appeal.

In Titan Souls every strike is fatal. At a glance there appear to be no fair fights in these dainty hills and valleys, …

Gran Turismo for bikes; an idea so beautiful in its simplicity, it's a surprise no-one's done it before. Well, actually…

The gem-matching's pretty simple, but the strategy is surprisingly complex.

A faithful and beautifully crafted Metroidvania homage that never quite stamps its own identity on the genre.

Coherent, imaginative and powerful, Bloodborne is genius.

Pillars of Eternity is the Baldur's Gate 3 we never got, returning to the Infinity Engine style of role-playing with flair.

I'm still playing Dragon Age: Inquisition, months after it came out. I only came to it over Christmas, but most evening…

The traditional nostalgic view of boys at play is that old playground classic of 'war', where kids pelt around the tarm…

When the Khmer Rouge took control of Cambodia in the mid-70s, the term 'Year Zero' was coined to describe the idea of r…