
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.

What Bound lacks in challenging gameplay, it makes up for in breathtaking awe.

No Man's Sky is a massive machine with broken and missing parts, but dig deep enough and you'll be moved in ways you never expected.

This Is the Police is an enjoyable but flawed management sim that gives you a taste of what it's like to be the chief of police.

Abzu is deeply, transcendentally beautiful--not just visually splendid, but emotionally evocative. Without question, it is this year's Journey.

A new version of Gods Eater Burst transitions to PlayStation 4 with mixed results.

Roguelike hack-and-slasher Necropolis offers intense combat and a quirky setting, along with repetition, confusion, and permadeath difficulty.

Quadrilateral Cowboy makes you feel like a skilled hacker in a memorable 1980’s cyberpunk world.

Headlander's weird world overflows with color, power-ups, and personality.

The Assembly shows signs of promise, but it stumbles in its attempt to craft a compelling story.

I Am Setsuna proudly mimics classic Japanese RPGs, but at what cost?

Brigador is a destructive romp filled with explosions and death, brought to you by some of the coolest robots around.

The Technomancer is a jack of all RPG trades, master of none.

Ghostbusters fulfills your worst expectations of licensed games.

Breached wants to evoke the sci-fi survivalism of The Martian but fails to get off the ground.

Simple and stunningly fun multiplayer, both online and off, makes Videoball one of the surprise hits of the year.