
New Pokemon Snap pays homage to the Nintendo 64 classic while venturing off in bold new directions.

Last reviewed: Mina the Hollower · 9 days ago

New Pokemon Snap pays homage to the Nintendo 64 classic while venturing off in bold new directions.

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

Snack World starts off as a charming RPG, but tedium quickly sets in.

Dreams is a technical and creative marvel, a robust game-making toolkit where the only limits are your skill and imagination.

The Pedestrian is a charming game that asks you to puzzle your way out of the dimensional bounds of street signs.

Through the Darkest of Times is a harrowing, narrative-driven strategy game with a history lesson for today.

Despite some tedious backtracking, Kunai's fast-paced combat and satisfying platforming are accentuated by smart level designs that make it a blast to play.

Kingdom Hearts 3: Re:Mind's new playable characters and post-game bosses aren't enough to save it from feeling like a tired retread of events experienced just last year.

Lenna's Inception is an enjoyable, procedurally generated ode to The Legend of Zelda.

Journey to the Savage Planet is a charming and upbeat adventure about exploring an uncharted planet in service of your corporate overlords.

The Last Autumn reinvigorates the engrossing core loop of Frostpunk with intelligent iterations on its objectives and new laws to fully exploit.

Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot's emphasis on making the world and character interactions of Dragon Ball as important as the fights makes for a solid action-RPG experience.

Unity of Command 2 maintains a strong supply of deep, compelling wargame strategy once you break through its wall of jargon.

Wattam is a bizarre playground full of wonder, discovery, and cheerful friends that come together to tell a sweet story about rising up and bonding after conflict.

A relaxing little adventure with gorgeous graphics, easy puzzles, and good vibes.

Supermash's promise of a limitless supply of genre mashed games can't mask their shallow, repetitive, and uninteresting gameplay.

Phoenix Point takes a good shot at revitalizing the XCOM formula.