opinion
The Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – February 13

The Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – February 13

by Kyle Hilliard on Feb 13, 2026 at 03:30 PM

Welcome to Friday the 13th – the spookiest day of the year! In honor of the occasion we're playing mostly... not scary games. Unless you consider the failing a nongram puzzle scary. Or you don't like cats? The new God of War games has some monsters in it. That's something right? Crisol, actually, is pretty dang creepy, so that counts. There you go.

In any case, it's time for the weekend and our usual recommendation of games and things you should check out! But before that, here's a recap of the biggest stories of the week:

The Games You Should Check Out This Weekend

The Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – February 13

Crisol: Theater Of Idols

Wesley LeBlanc
Crisol: Theater of Idols is, so far, a pretty decent time. It’s what I would lovingly describe as Double-A, and if you’re a fan of the PlayStation 3/Xbox 360 era of games and gameplay feel, I think it’s a horror adventure you should check out. I’m only a few hours in, so I reserve the right to change my opinion when I play more, but it’s a Resident Evil-like survival horror game with a unique spin on it. That spin is that your guns use your blood as ammo, so in order to reload your weapons, you’ll need to sacrifice some of your health, creating a fun push and pull of tension between your survival and the life-like puppet in front of you swinging a blade. Its story is… well, it’s there, and things are happening, but it hasn’t drawn me in just yet. Part of that is because the voice acting feels a bit all over the place and is pretty much always over the top. Still, Crisol: Theater of Idols riffs on a Spanish-Gothic style of Catholicism that has been interesting to look at in the opening hours. I look forward to seeing what else it has in store for me.
The Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – February 13

CiniCross

Kyle Hilliard

I was not following CiniCross prior to release, and frankly, I was a fool! It merges a genre I love (nonogram a.k.a. Picross puzzles) with a genre I like (rogue games), to create something that I don't want to stop playing. Basically, you complete nongram puzzles as quickly as possible to acquire upgrades that you must choose between to improve yourself so that you can survive until the final floor. It has some faults. I have hit some consistent game-crashing bugs (which are particularly painful in a rogue game), and I don't love the music and sound effects, but I adore the core mechanics and dark aesthetic. I have been playing on my Steam Deck and have had this much trouble putting the device down since it was my Vampire Survivors machine when I first acquired it. I don't know that this is the game that will convince you love nonogram puzzles, but if you do love nonogram puzzles like I do, I hope I've convinced you to check it out.

The Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – February 13

Mewgenics

Charles Harte
I've spent about 90 hours with Mewgenics at this point, and I still have no clue how much longer it will take me to reach the ending. It's a massive game, but its stellar combat is worth your time (though it's up to you whether you want to invest as many hours as I have). It's a turn-based, grid-based roguelike where you command a squad of four cats through various wacky environments, from the sewers to the surface of the moon. Cats are each equipped a collar at the start of the run, which assigns them a class like Tank, Cleric, or Hunter, and abilities are so randomized that each experience is not only very different, but fun in a new way. The way two cats' passives might interact or the way an equipped item can completely transform a build is consistently engaging. It's also just tough enough to keep you engaged, as any battle can go sideways quickly if you lose focus. It also has a fantastic soundtrack that continues to expand the further you progress. I don't love the humor (too many poop jokes) and I find the cat-breeding mechanics in need of some quality of life upgrades, but most of the game is combat, and that combat rocks enough that Mewgenics is worth playing.
The Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – February 13

God Of War Sons Of Sparta

Kyle Hilliard

I am on the review for God of War Sons of Sparta, so look out for a proper scored review the game soon. As of this writing, however, I am about an hour in and I am so far enjoying the experience of getting a glimpse into Kratos' childhood. I have played every God of War game at release (even God of War: Betrayal, the pre-smartphone mobile game) and at this point I feel like I have lived his life alongside him. He's been through hell (often literally) but I like this chance to see him before it all went wrong. I also appreciate the framing of him telling his daughter, Calliope, a story. She is crucial to his life, but we've really only seen how she affected Kratos in God of War: Chains of Olympus for PSP.  Turns out he doesn't really like to talk about the most devastating event of his entire life. The action has a few shortcomings and some stiffness, but I am eager to get a better handle on it and see all the game has to offer.

The Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – February 13

Overwatch

Brian Shea

Seven years ago, this would have been my weekly recommendation of what to play – after all, I did put over 1,000 hours into the original Overwatch – but if you told me coming into 2026 that I'd be back into it, I would have laughed at you. But here we are; Overwatch's recent complete overhaul, which saw the game stripped of the "2" in its title, made me curious enough to jump back in. As a regular player from 2016 to 2019, Overwatch sits near the top of my personal favorite games of all time, but following the announcement of Overwatch 2 back in 2019, the title fell off hard. Content slowed to a drip as the team focused on Overwatch 2's story content, most of which never saw the light of day. Then, when Overwatch 2 arrived, I still enjoyed it (I gave it an 9 out of 10, after all), but it was a far cry from the novelty and excitement surrounding the original game during those first several years.

This reworking of the entire game is so much more than just a simple title rebrand; in addition to a more prominent story, complete with Blizzard's famously great cinematics, it's also refocusing on what players love. A permanent 6v6 mode is there for those who favor the original Overwatch team compositions. A ton of new heroes are joining the roster this year (including five heroes just this week), completely flipping any existing Meta on its head. And speaking of Meta, the new Conquest Meta Event has you pick a faction and fight for it over the course of a five-week event, earning rewards every step of the way. As someone who hasn't played the game for several years now, I'm struggling to not only rewire my rusty muscle memory, but also relearn my favorite heroes, as many of them have received reworks in my absence. It's a little overwhelming, and many of my old strategies now fail, but I'm having a blast dipping my toe back in. And when I am able to go on a run as one of my old favorites, I'm reminded precisely why I fell in love with this game in the first place.

Products In This Article

God of War Sons of Spartacover

God of War Sons of Sparta

Platform:
PlayStation 5
Release Date:
Crisol: Theater of Idolscover

Crisol: Theater of Idols

Platform:
PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, PC
Release Date:
Mewgenicscover

Mewgenics

Platform:
PC
Release Date: