
Pragmata is an excellent shooter with a hacking twist that introduces strategic depth and variety, all in service of a heartfelt story.

Last reviewed: Mina the Hollower · 9 days ago

Pragmata is an excellent shooter with a hacking twist that introduces strategic depth and variety, all in service of a heartfelt story.

Mixtape offers a sincere, often hilarious look at growing up, set to an incredible soundtrack.

By refining what was already great and building on its best qualities with a brilliant new story arc, Persona 5 Royal asserts itself as an unforgettable and empowering RPG.

Good Job is a humorous and inventive puzzle game where sometimes the best job isn't the cleanest one.

The remake of Resident Evil 3 makes a strong first impression, and its online companion game Resistance has some interesting ideas, but they both struggle to follow through.

Corruption 2029 is a mechanically proficient but disappointingly hollow take on the XCOM genre.

MLB The Show 20 opts for refinement over sweeping changes, maintaining the series' high bar for quality with some smart additions.

Call of Duty: Warzone adapts common battle royale tropes but puts its own spin on them to create a distinct entry in the genre.

Doom Eternal intensifies the battles with Hell's hordes by requiring you to constantly calculate the best ways to rip, tear, and stay alive.

Animal Crossing: New Horizons gives you more creative freedom and more to do on any given day while preserving what makes the series special.

Nioh 2 is even tougher than the original, and you'll get on its level or happily die trying.

Mindseize is a solid metroidvania that lacks spark and memorable characters.

Pokemon Mystery Dungeon DX recreates the strange pair of Pokemon spin-offs from over a decade ago with style.

Arc System Works' fighting game based on the popular Japanese mobile RPG is mechanically sound and introduces some interesting ideas.

Dota Underlords is a consistently compelling multiplayer strategy game where no match plays out the same way twice.

Wolcen: Lords of Mayhem attempts to stand out with deep, free-form character creation, but it has far too many problems with all of its underlying systems.

Forget standoffs and cattle rustling--Bloodroots turns the Wild West into a chaotic murder cartoon.