
I know this can’t last forever. But in the meantime, I’m going to absorb as much from my time here as possible in the hopes of taking at least a little bit of Aurora back with me.

Last reviewed: Yoshi and the Mysterious Book · 6 days ago

I know this can’t last forever. But in the meantime, I’m going to absorb as much from my time here as possible in the hopes of taking at least a little bit of Aurora back with me.

The long-awaited fourth entry in BioWare’s fantasy series isn't just good, it's some of the studio's best work

Can you believe this game came out in 2016? I certainly can

After nine years, Deep Silver’s zombie sequel delivers all the ridiculous fun you had hoped for

That it’s not a very good game, and one that desperately needed a lot more development before this seemingly premature release, will matter almost not at all. It’s stunningly pretty, it lets you make friends with the Creepers, and the cutscenes are brilliant. And it matches those new pyjamas. Should they ever finish Minecraft Legends, allowing you to instantly gather your spawned troops from anywhere, fixing the atrocious UI, giving your units some vestiges of pathfinding, and hugely increasing the mission variation, I think it could be a great place.

A city-builder with no roads, taxes or industrial zones

Two weeks into the newest expansion we break down what's working and what's not

Team Ninja’s latest is wonderfully challenging, utterly captivating—and the most approachable Soulslike to date

This remake of a Yakuza spin-off is the best samurai game that you can play right now

Same classic RTS action, new and improved location

The first-person adventure gets a crisp, compelling update for the Nintendo Switch

Returnal is given new life, and huge resolutions, in its PC incarnation

A deeply sincere, but ultimately vacuous, exploration of the end of an era

More streamlined tactical gameplay can’t save this Switch RPG from terrible writing

Forspoken tells a great story, but suffers the technical jank of an iffy PS3 game

Cosmic Shake looks great and plays well, but it feels smaller and less stable than its predecessor

Despite its room for growth, I can’t recall the last time I was genuinely this excited to sit down for multiple rounds of a first-person shooter. As an endless story generator that spins up scenarios of randomized action and survival, few multiplayer games have come close to capturing my time and attention as thoroughly as Warzone 2.0’s DMZ has.