
The open-world Dark Souls successor is staggering in breadth and challenge

Last reviewed: Zero Parades: For Dead Spies · 14 days ago

The open-world Dark Souls successor is staggering in breadth and challenge

Look at this expansion, isn’t it neat?

Pinocchio’s journey is a s rewarding slow burn


I can’t overstate how fun these puzzles are

Starfield buries its best moments beneath too much tedium

Join Zale and Valere on a quest to fight an evil being known as The Fleshmancer

FromSoftware’s newest outing is a clever, demanding, and generous mecha game

Total War: Warhammer 3’s Shadows of Change introduces three Lords of varying quality

All the combat options make for a colorful but messy experience

In Fort Solis, you must find out why the station on Mars is abandoned

I look forward to playing, and replaying and replaying, Baldur’s Gate 3 for possibly years to come. It’s clearly a role-playing game classic and has already been an overwhelming success for Larian Studios. It’s just unfortunate that I end up comparing the relatively limited power of a video game to the power of my own imagination — and it also feels like a problem the game can’t solve. Baldur’s Gate 3 is a masterpiece of a D&D game in every sense of the word, for good and, sometimes, for ill.

From the creators of The Red Strings Club


You can’t spell slaughter without laughter


One of the most touching cooking games in years