
Joining Zelda and Mario on the Switch, New Horizons is an expanded, polished, next-generation reboot of a classic Nintendo game.

Includes IGN UK, IGN Italia, IGN Brasil
Last reviewed: 007 First Light · 8 days ago

Joining Zelda and Mario on the Switch, New Horizons is an expanded, polished, next-generation reboot of a classic Nintendo game.

Authentic Middle Ages problem solving that needs a bit longer in the early access oven.

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 reheats and reserves the same multiplayer from Modern Warfare 2 with some extra maps and tweaks as garnishes. This smooth combat remains gaming comfort food, but slower unlock progression makes it harder to get excited about.

The Last Faith is not the pinnacle of 2D metroidvanias, but its collection of weapons is genuinely cool and busting the masters of its samey levels is satisfying.

Persona 5 Tactica is a big bag of bite-sized Phantom Thieves adventures that keeps the spirit of the series alive and shows that it can work great with a grid-based battle system.

Simple and occasionally even elegant mechanics make this cooperative tabletop-style RPG fun once you get into it, but a lacking interface makes it more difficult to enjoy these straightforward adventures than it should be.

With exciting co-op and lots of little improvements, this sequel is a joy.

EA Sports WRC feels like a great racing game trying to fight its way out of an unfinished one.

This sequel is an all-star platform fighter that finally lives up to that name.

Like a Dragon Gaiden’s combat hits with flash and fury and its story is sharp, but its setting and side activities feel a bit on the stale side.

Underbaked, rehashed, and cobbled together from multiplayer parts, Modern Warfare 3’s single-player campaign is everything a Call of Duty story mode shouldn’t be.

The Invincible might have a strong inspiration in the 1964 novel, but every time it attempts to make it more interesting as an interactive experience it ends up doing the opposite.

Despite crashes and some issues with its difficulty curve, The Talos Principle 2's ability to explore both interesting puzzle design and deep philosophy simultaneously is incredibly impressive.

Creative multiplayer modes make up for minigames that quickly become repetitive.

Silly yet sincere, Thirsty Suitors pushes you to contemplate your own relationships.

Though heavy on style and creepy vibes, the scariest things going on in Quantum Error are its tepid story and characters, numerous bugs, oppressive checkpoints, and a roster of truly dumb enemies.

RoboCop: Rogue City is the video game equivalent of a B movie in the best way, with the look and over-the-top action to capture the essence of the series.