
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.

A Plague's Tale's emotive story of resilience is underscored by a backdrop of screeching rats, the unremitting horrors of war, and a genuinely likeable cast of characters.

Life Is Strange 2: Episode 3 introduces exciting new faces, familiar threats, and difficult impactful choices that shape the Diaz brothers.

Mortal Kombat 11 hits where it counts, with smart refinements to a deep and exciting fighting system, entertaining story mode, and rewarding persistent content.

Whispers of a Machine is a smart point-and-click that elevates its spotty lore with a great script and an excellent, if underused, augmentation system.

Game Freak's ambitious puzzle-action platformer has a neat hook that never quite comes together.

World War Z is unrefined and rough around the edges, but it makes up for this with satisfying co-operative action that fills your screen with hundreds of enemies for you to kill.

Anno 1800 is a beautiful and comprehensive yet strangely cold Industrial Age city builder.

Days Gone has its exciting moments, but it fails to say anything interesting or meaningful about its story and characters. Its PC version enhances performance and visuals, but others the game remains the same for the most part.

The fourth BoxBoy game isn't a major shake-up, but it's more reliably enjoyable puzzle fun.

SteamWorld Quest's accessible take on card-based combat is undermined by an uneven difficulty curve that frustrates more than it encourages.

Overloop's Falcon Age is a compelling action-adventure game and highly original, deeply satisfying falconry simulator, making it a feather in the cap for PlayStation VR.

Katana Zero's excellent writing, stylish and thoughtful combat, and gorgeous artwork make its unsatisfyingly short journey well worth taking.

Pathway is a workmanlike XCOM-lite whose breezy tone stumbles into some tired tropes.

An ambitious narrative adventure that mixes fun lore with fiddly mechanics.

My Time at Portia feels like it has a bounty of offerings, but there's not as much to the world as first appears.