This final season of Damages ups the ante by conflating a banking scam with the murky legality of a WikiLeaks-like website.
Like its characters, The L.A. Complex is serious about its setting.
It rewards you for speed runs and efficiency within each level, but it’s so downright masochistic in its expected precision that such goals seem hopelessly unattainable.
Not being able to import your Magic: The Gathering 2012 decks may be a bummer, but then again, the point of Magic: The Gathering 2013 is to sell the combinations offered by the new set.
Aaron Sorkin’s back with another dreamy bit of wish fulfillment.
Exploring the landscape is fun, as there are hidden “god plates” and silly achievements behind solid-seeming nooks and in just-out-of-reach crannies, but manipulating the objects to get there is a tireless chore.
Splice is a game that’s essentially about the act of creation.
This overly styled, repetitious, kitchen-sink comic brawler is “awful but hilarious.”
The half-joking question often asked of modern art is not whether it’s any good, but whether it’s art.
As for the gameplay, it’s not unique, but it’s certainly robust enough to warrant a second playthrough (on the Dark difficulty, if you dare).
Brawsome has gone out of its way to ensure that these top-down adventures never grow too wearisome for the player, and to allow for bite-sized or full-length play sessions.
Creepy whistles and synthesized music echo through the speakers, and the strong visual style of the game’s many camera angles compel you to keep exploring.
Gregory Poirier’s Missing is little more than a one-line elevator pitch with some fancy choreography and flashy scenery.
Like the character himself, a slave who rose up to defy an entire nation, Spartacus has a lot going against it.
What the single-player campaign lacks in breathtaking set pieces and the variety of settings found in other modern FPS games, it makes up for in challengingly but fairly scripted boss encounters.
The game wants you to play around with different combos; in fact, it allows you to use a shield, a primary weapon, and a secondary weapon, even though you’ve only got two hands.
The crack-like and Pokémon-esque method of earning players aside, NFL Blitz’s biggest fumble is in its extremely flawed match-making experience.
Watching Hung is what I imagine zero-G sex would be like.
Homeland is the perfect show for a post-9/11 America, a nation united not by trust, but by suspicion.
Prime Suspect is arresting and criminally entertaining.