Push through the tedium and you may just be gobsmacked by the game’s beauty.
As the adage goes, a picture is worth a thousand words.
Turns out, what counts as horror in Oxenfree II is adult life itself.
This is Ghost Trick as it always was: pristine, unassuming, and inimitable.
For developer Haemimont Games, the year 2001 is a statement of purpose.
The game’s story may be the most powerful summoning spell ever cast in the Final Fantasy series.
Yuke’s has managed to deliver an accessible, breezy rendition of their trademark product.
These 15 games look to be the tip of a rather astounding iceberg.
Dr. Fetus’ Mean Meat Machine Review: Get in the Meat Grinder and Sharpen Your Reflexes
Dr. Fetus’ Mean Meat Machine is more than a puzzle-branded reskin of Super Meat Boy.
It only helps that Dark Descent so ably captures the look and tone of the Alien films.
The next generation of fighting games starts right here.
The art style of Dordogne is especially notable in sequences that feature more movement.
Harmony: The Fall of Reverie Review: Setting Players on a Poetic Path to Selflessness
The choices you make attest to the belief that logic and empathy aren’t mutually exclusive.
Diablo IV pushes the series’s signature formula in thrilling directions.
For better and worse, Amnesia: The Bunker is an intense game of resource management.
Stop me if you’ve heard this one before.
Killer Frequency is a delightfully gimmicky game with an outrageous horror-comedy premise.
Nothing we see here matters because it’s all been made up for puzzle-solving.
For as prevalent as the combat is in this System Shock, it never quite gels.
Like the character at its center, Gollum is in sad, broken shambles.
‘Lego 2K Drive’ Review: An Inviting Racer with Unfortunate Microtransactions Under Its Hood
This competent arcade racing game is let down by its difficulty and microtransactions.