Everything in the game stylishly demonstrates its commitment to giving life to ecosystems.
There’s not a single choice that you make across the game that feels difficult.
The Lost Crown convinces players to see both traversal and combat as two halves of a whole.
The game is a stinging condemnation of entertainment that thrives on the suffering of others.
The game is a celebration of our inquisitive humanity and capacity for growth.
The game promotes a harmonious sense of working with the world.
Every inch of Super Mario Bros. Wonder is bursting with personality.
The game teaches us that some stories can only be fully told or understood in hindsight.
Mirage ought to have been more than the dim illusion of where the series has already traveled.
Here, the silliness of being a F.A.R.T. is predicated on enjoyable, rock-solid gameplay.
The faster it moves, the better it plays.
Disney Illusion Island Review: Mickey’s First Metroidvania Is in Search of More Magic
Disney Illusion Island has enough magic to make you wish there was more of it.
As the adage goes, a picture is worth a thousand words.
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.
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.
Killer Frequency is a delightfully gimmicky game with an outrageous horror-comedy premise.
The game isn’t the action-oriented experience that TRON fans may be expecting.
‘Curse of the Sea Rats’ Review: A Metroidvania That Has Trouble Tipping the Scales for Fun
The only place where the protagonists, and by extension the game, stand out is in combat.
It’s at such a remove from anything human that we see no consequences to your actions.
In the end, Have a Nice Death can’t escape its own premise.