
Best-in-class combat and a triumphant move to an open-world structure.

Includes IGN UK, IGN Italia, IGN Brasil
Last reviewed: 007 First Light · 6 days ago

Best-in-class combat and a triumphant move to an open-world structure.

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

The Switch 2’s Mario Kart is a blast, but its open world isn’t the main reason why.

This interactive brochure is a muddled collection of quaint tech demos and boring factoids.

Even if it’s clearly dancing on the same old strings, Lies of P: Overture is an excellent expansion that adds a whole lot more to a game that was already great.

Uneven difficulty and a Holy Grail’s worth of bugs prevent this Arthurian tale from finding greatness.

F1 25 is a far broader and better package than last year’s installment, and it’s comfortably the strongest the series has been since the fan favourite F1 2020.

An excellent blend of cozy life sim and action-adventure RPG that rarely stops surprising.

When Elden Ring Nightreign is played exactly as it was designed to be played, it’s one of the finest examples of a three-player co-op game around – but that's harder to do than it should be, and playing solo is poorly balanced.

JDM: Japanese Drift Master is an ambitious and sincere ode to Japanese drift culture, but right now it feels like an unfinished project that’s shipped without the early access caveat.

A fun, if barebones, tactics game reminiscent of TMNT's arcade classics.

Monster Train 2 is a fantastic upgrade for what was already one of the best deckbuilding roguelites out there, with so many interesting variables and options to make replays interesting that it feels bottomless.

This cozy MMO life sim is endlessly relaxing and incredibly hard to put down.

Deliver At All Costs features some uniquely fun deliveries and a satisfyingly smashable set of cities, but its slapdash story and limited tools for vehicular destruction mean it’s one shipment that’s far from the complete package.

This blacksmithing action RPG doesn’t forge a sharp enough edge.

The first DLC expansion is a bit threadbare compared to what came before.

The Precinct’s focus on proper protocol eventually wears a little thin, but its gorgeous, top-down take on GTA-inspired action from the right side of the law is undeniably arresting.