
There continues to be nothing quite like Animal Crossing, and New Horizons proves that there's life in the old Nook yet.

Includes GamesRadar
Last reviewed: Mina the Hollower · 7 days ago

There continues to be nothing quite like Animal Crossing, and New Horizons proves that there's life in the old Nook yet.

Reviewing Eco Lifestyle, the latest expansion pack for The Sims 4

Closer to Red Dead Redemption 2 than anything I've played

Hades 2's impeccable combat and flawless characterization make for a follow-up that surpasses even its excellent predecessor.

EA Sports FC 26 serves up all the teams, all the kits, all the players – and all the goals, all the time.

If you like the idea of QWOP and Getting Over It but bounced off the difficulty, Baby Steps is perfect for you – most of the time.

Silent Hill f is thick with a horrifying yet beautiful foggy atmosphere and truly gnarly monster designs, combined with incredibly well-judged, smart, and gut-wrenching writing.

Enemies are lacking in character, all drawn from the B-movie guide to horror monsters.

Dying Light: The Beast is a staggering achievement, recapturing the series’ spirit and elevating it tenfold.

The variety is cool, and returning to the original world for the final lap comes with some exciting changes.

Lego Voyagers is a brief, delightful puzzle adventure with a sweet, simple narrative and a disarming soundtrack.

Borderlands 4 extracts the essence of a finale shootout and spins it across an entire game, with a staggering amount of guns allowing for pure carnage.

Hollow Knight: Silksong is a near perfect followup to its justifiably revered predecessor. Unfurling from its cocoon, this Metroidvania has evolved on just about everything I loved about the original.

Cronos: The New Dawn is an unabashed mash-up of survival horror's greatest hits, from Dead Space to Silent Hill, and its references make it a thrillingly familiar experience for fans of the horror genre.

It's a harsh world full of woe, yet making your way through Hell is Us still manages to be enjoyable. A lack of hand-holding regularly provides a sense of achievement.

There's some really snappy and interesting combat hidden within Lost Soul Aside, but it can be hard to appreciate after its slow, dull opening and drawn out chapters.

While everything does eventually come together, what's perhaps pitched as a victory lap through what came before ends up a bit of a slog, spending an incredibly long time reiterating what you already figured out.