
A deeply funny Mii simulator that’s deflated by ridiculous sharing restrictions.

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

A deeply funny Mii simulator that’s deflated by ridiculous sharing restrictions.

The most charming video game bubble wrap you’ll ever pop, and not much more.

A completely new and very fun way to explore several decades of Atari games.

The Dark Pictures Anthology: The Devil in Me’s tour through a maniac’s mansion is disappointingly lacking in any real menace or surprise.

A ridiculous sequel that’s bigger, sillier, and packed with more low-stakes fun.

Somerville has ties to modern legends Limbo and Inside, but it’s equally reminiscent of another Hall of Famer: Out of This World. The end result is a unique physics-based puzzle adventure that isn’t quite on the level of the games that inspired it, but is nevertheless an extraterrestrial nightmare worth exploring.

A clever Late Medieval detective story with a gorgeously-realized world.
Among Us VR is a strong remake of Innersloth’s social deduction hit. While Schell Games’ take could do with extra content, it makes up for this with polished gameplay.

An open-world adventure that mostly succeeds at mixing up the Sonic formula.

Marvel Snap packs bold ideas, deep gameplay, a punchy presentation and lots of love for Marvel. Its approach to building a collection and randomness in gameplay won't be for everyone, but it's still well worth playing.

With its absolute mountain of rally locations, WRC Generations is uncommonly generous package for gravel groupies, asphalt addicts, and mud-slinging maniacs alike.

Balance issues, a lack of content, and aggressive monetization get in the way of good ideas.

The Entropy Centre is a more than competent Portal tribute with clever time-manipulation puzzles and an endearing cast, but it doesn't take its clever concept as far as it seems like it should.

God of War Ragnarok is an almighty achievement and creates a new high that makes many of its peers look mortal by comparison.

The Valiant is a serviceable, squad-based RTS with a sturdy story, but it’s bogged down by backtrack-heavy battles and a bad final boss fight.

A shallow grind of an overworld strategy game threatens to ruin enjoyment of Mount & Blade II: Bannerlord's unique and sublimely gritty tactical action.

A return to form with a revamped battle system and a charming cast of characters.