Review: Starfield is Bethesda’s biggest RPG, but also its most disjointed
Starfield is an enormous and impressive experience, but it struggles to make its myriad parts feel like a cohesive whole.
Starfield is an enormous and impressive experience, but it struggles to make its myriad parts feel like a cohesive whole.
Dimension Shellshock adds an amazingly fun survival mode and new characters to last year’s greatest beat ‘em up, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge.
One of gaming’s most successful ‘isekai’ stories, Final Fantasy Tactics Advance puts you in the role of a kid transported to Ivalice and pulls no punches along the way.
With The Making of Karateka, Digital Eclipse shifts our perception of what videogame ‘making of’ content can entail, raising the bar for future products in this new genre of “docu-games”.
The neon-drenched cyberpunk slaughterhouse that is Turbo Overkill is one of the best old-school shooters that money can buy.
Larian Studios’ Baldur’s Gate 3 is a bold take on the legendary series based on the D&D property; a massive effort that is definitely not perfect, and that’s what makes it so compelling.
Let’s break out the wine glasses and celebrate the legacy of the last great entry in this overlooked Nintendo racing franchise with F-Zero GX!
Atlas Fallen’s momentum system is a fantastic idea and works well, but the fights themselves aren’t interesting enough to keep up.
Blasphemous 2 is a huge improvement upon its predecessor in just about every conceivable way; it’s a beautifully crafted adventure that might as well be the best of its kind this year.
En Garde! is a game which invokes the spirit of Zorro in the best way.