
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

A defiant wuxia epic characterized by rapid, brutal combat

For these exiled monks, the Gloom is the little death that brings total obliteration

Capcom’s nostalgic romp through the halcyon days of hero shooters has pacing issues

How is a game that pits a dog against Lovecraftian gods so boring?

It’s 10 p.m. — do you know where your Pikmin are?

Short but impactful, Viewfinder left me wanting more

A richer take on a twice-established formula

The sequel expands the world of 2016’s indie darling, sometimes to a fault

It’s historical fiction with an almost entirely female cast

At its core, Fight Forever is a love letter to the golden generation of pro wrestling video games. It is not perfect, and on the content side, it’s slightly dated — but most of my complaints wash away every time I pick up the controller and start a new match. The nostalgia and finesse of those old glory years emanates from so many angles that it’s hard to nitpick the places that fall short. AEW: Fight Forever is at once a faithful homage, and a promising signifier of the future.

A delicately balanced tower of interconnected silliness and escalating absurdity

Slick mechanics and sim-like systems combine in this deceptively deep sandbox shooter

Weyland-Yutani, all kinds of aliens, and an uncomfortable isometric perspective

Excellent action wrapped in an awful story
