
From Software's latest is a masterpiece of open-world design that places exploration and player agency at the heart of the experience.

Last reviewed: Mina the Hollower · 8 days ago

From Software's latest is a masterpiece of open-world design that places exploration and player agency at the heart of the experience.

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

The Fidelio Incident can be a beautiful and touching game, but it's too often bogged down by shallow objectives.

The Town of Light examines mental illnesses and the hospitals meant to treat them in the early 1900s, but ultimately fails to stick the landing.

Arms' unique take on fighting can be hard to adjust to, but once you do, it's a surprisingly deep fighter that has you thinking on your feet.

Steel Division is an aggressive, focused tactical game that deftly leverages historical realism to create unique twists on the RTS formula.

This remastered trio splendidly captures Studio Liverpool's turn-of-the-decade hover racing renaissance.

Dirt 4 is a grounded and thrilling racing experience with customisable difficulty options that should appeal to newcomers and veterans alike.

Despite some faults outside of the ring, Tekken 7's diverse cast and time-honored fighting system make it one of the best 3D fighting games around.

A week after launch, Friday the 13th remains the buggy and sometimes-broken game it was on the day of its release.

Though rough around the edges, Danger Zone does a commendable job recapturing some of Burnout's lightning in a bottle.

A novel and inventive approach to first-person exploration falls short of its ambitions.

This beautiful cyberpunk playground holds a staggering amount of detail but not enough reasons to stay.

Shallow puzzles and frustrating navigation mar an otherwise beautiful experience.

Endless Space 2 provides loads of 4X strategizing and space-opera-styled storytelling in this epic about building an intergalactic empire.

The ambitious-but-flawed Birthdays the Beginning is packed with charm, but suffers from a clunky interface and confusing systems.

Mages of Mystralia has charm and a lot of heart, but it falls a bit short of delivering a memorable adventure.