Tales of Zestiria relies entirely upon its entertaining, colorful cast of characters to distract players from anything even remotely tedious or derivative.
“Why Is This Night Different?” feels like an overly complicated table-setting episode, especially given the way Homeland merges its other two subplots.
Jackbox Games’s Jackbox Party Pack 2 is a disappointingly sophomoric sequel, and in every sense of the word.
Gil Scott-Heron had it wrong, at least when it came to music: The revolution most certainly will be televised.
The Rock Band 4 experience is little more than an expensive new coat of paint.
Carrie’s been alone this whole season, and both literally and figuratively, has no super power to fall back on.
Homeland is firing on all cylinders when it focuses on what all of this endless terrorism means to the individual players, particularly Carrie.
Homeland is best when both sides are nuanced and evenly matched, and even better when the two are dangerously overlapping.
This could’ve been the unholy child of Dr. Seuss and the Marquis de Sade.
There are still plenty of thorns, but it manages to address and improve nearly every aspect of the original 1.0 release.
An impressive epic, even if it falls several steps shy of the open-world grandeur realized by The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt.
If Tearaway was a diamond in the rough world of Vita gaming, it’s an exceedingly polished masterpiece on the PS4.
It lives up to its title, as players will be glued to it all night, exhilaratingly racing to one of the many potential endings.
As with Dear Esther before it, it offers up an admirable and atmospheric experience that simply isn’t all that much fun to play.
True Detective’s first season had a methodical and measured approach to tracking its villain, but this season doesn’t know when to stop changing things up.
Simultaneously cynical and sincere, it’s postmodern critique of video games that comes in the form of a neofuturist video game.
While the visuals are nothing to scoff at, this nascent title is a baby that could’ve been thrown away with all the bathwater.
This is an irritating table-setting episode in which the characters constantly explain how the pieces fit together.
Everything you need to know about the inconsistencies of the show can be summed up by the two standoffs that occur in this episode.
Throughout this season of True Detective, a singular point has been drilled into our heads: “We get the world we deserve.”