Review: Phantom Liberty is a thrilling expansion to Cyberpunk 2077, but it’s the free update that offers the most major changes
Phantom Liberty and update 2.0 absolutely makes Cyberpunk 2077 a lot closer to what its original vision had promised.
Phantom Liberty and update 2.0 absolutely makes Cyberpunk 2077 a lot closer to what its original vision had promised.
Featuring ten classic releases, Taito Milestones 2 is an otherwise barebones retro package that doesn’t go past the very essentials of presenting a retro compilation.
It’s been 20 years since one of the first surprisingly good Simpsons game was released.
Only hardcore fans of ‘80s wrestling or ‘90s JRPGs need apply for WrestleQuest, a backwards-looking fusion of the two
When playing with like-minded participants, joining Leatherface and his merry band of killers can be a whole lot of fun in Gun’s adaptation of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre to game form.
What do you get when you mix a gun with an umbrella? You guessed it. A pretty darn good game, that’s what.
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”.