Now that the game has been out for a while and we’ve moved away from some of the hype and hyperbole, just how good is Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 2’s campaign?
Matthew John McCormick investigates.
All in Reviews
Now that the game has been out for a while and we’ve moved away from some of the hype and hyperbole, just how good is Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 2’s campaign?
Matthew John McCormick investigates.
Ok, so now that we have determined that even people that dislike Vampire Survivors, actually like it if they try hard enough, what else do we investigate?
Ah yes! Broc Peterson joins us to investigate the post-launch, paid DLC, and see if it can live up to the base game.
Ok listen. I don’t mean to alarm you… But I think we have found someone that doesn’t like Vampire Survivors.
How dare Jon/Jenna Simspon!? I mean— wait… What’s that?
Oh… You should read their full review…
The indie game market isn’t exactly short on pixel art, farming-based, life-sims but Kynseed might just be a little special.
Mystery and deals with fae await in Eloise Evan’s review.
It has been a banner year for interactive fiction in the indie game scene. Wayward Strand deftly tackles difficult subject matter but is the game that surrounds it just as good?
Tyler Denyer reviews.
PSX throwback games are so hot right now. Lunistice hopes to recapture the magic of classic games but has A Grumpy Fox gone away and made the best Sonic game in decades?
Broc Peterson reviews.
Ys VIII: Lacrimosa of Dana is nearly seven years old. It was great then but all this time later and having made the jump from handheld to 4K console, does it still hold up?
Henry Stockdale certainly thinks so.
Arkanoid is a game that has seen countless releases and iterations over the years. However, now, 36 years later, publisher Microids is attempting to modernise this classic.
While the concept is sound, the asking price is anything but.
Broc Peterson reviews.
He wasn’t A pinball wizard. He was THE PINBALL WIZARD!
Does this genre mash-up hit the right notes? Or is it not much more than some fun wordplay?
We welcome Broc Peterson to the site for his first review.
A roguelike, retro-shooter with beefy guns and tough-as-nails combat? Sign up.
Deadlink is an Early Access title full of potential.
Scott McCrae reviews.
There are very few JRPGs with as fervent of a cult following as The Legends of Heroes and very few games the fans (in the west) have been waiting so long to play as Trails From Zero. But over a decade later does Trails From Zero still hold up? Ruddy Celestial investigates.
Saint Row hasn’t gotten off to the best of starts but now that the dust has settled a bit… Is it really that bad?
Matthew John McCormick has some thoughts and feelings on the series is needs to talk out.
There is no shortage of PSX-inspired horror games being released at the moment but every now and again, one nails the style so dead on it’s impossible not to be intrigued.
We welcome Angus Law to the site to review The Fridge Is Red and tell us if there’s substance behind the style.
Little Orpheus made its debut on Apple Arcade in 2020 but now two years later it has come to consoles and PC. Does this mobile adventure hold up on the big screen?
Scot Nowbaveh lets us know.
There is no greater hell than… well, Hell. But right after that comes watching golf for six hours.
Kate Robinson takes to the links again for the site to review this indie-sports-rogue-lite.
Soul-like, souls-lite, Sekiro-surrogate, bloodborne-fawn… Ok, that last one doesn’t really work, but there are a hell of a lot of game that follow in the footsteps of Fromsoftware these days.
Thymesia is the latest game to come for the king’s crown and Tyler Denyer is here to let us know if it gets struckdown or if regicide is about to take place.
I was a Teenage Exocolonist is an innovative, smart, deck-building life-sim. It is a game worth your time but its replayability might damage the your feelings towards the conclusion of your story.
Jamie Alexander reviews a game that is almost perfect.
Space. The embodiment of infinite possibility.
But in a game where anything is possible, there is plenty of room for failure.
We welcome Khee Hoon Chan to the site to review Out There: Oceans of Time.