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

Last reviewed: Zero Parades: For Dead Spies · 15 days ago

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

A defiant wuxia epic characterized by rapid, brutal combat

A Yakuza newcomer finds magic in the story of Yakuza 6

This warm-hearted yet unimaginative trek through the Kirby universe plays a lot better with friends

Konami’s Metal Gear spinoff is mystifying and disappointing

Stories are worth more than money on this adventure

Exploration and loveliness in an elemental woodland

Noir adventure is a storytelling revelation

Welcome innovations for a storied strategy epic


Intense moments stand out from a grinding career and multiplayer

The Shadow of the Colossus remake often improves upon the 2005 original, but at what cost?

The other key loop in the game lies in all the armor you can craft, and the massive trees of weapon upgrades available. Most armor comes from harvesting parts from monsters, with some extra bits of ore or bone thrown in for good measure. Each set of armor comes with strengths to different types of elements, but what will surely sway many players between one piece and the next is the look; there are certain sets I still covet. Since there is no feasible way to get a full five-piece set from killing a monster one time, it takes multiple kills to collect all the scales, membranes, quills and pelts required.


With everything I've played so far, Dragon Ball FighterZ made me feel as powerful and unstoppable as one of the series' lauded heroes. .

Cyberpunk adventure questions our allegiance to technology

Battlegrounds manages to exist within the crowded shooter genre in an unfinished state, and feel both fresh and creatively complete. From its early access launch on March 23 to its official launch today, Dec. 20, its creators have had nine months to repair, polish and expand on their baby. That the most substantial updates have been improved server performance, vaulting and car horns speaks to the confidence Greene and his squad have in the game's foundation.