Nioh 3's consistently rewarding approach to open-world design, combined with its entertaining Ninja gameplay style, cements it as the best entry in the franchise.
High on Life 2 is the kind of game that you can put on, laugh at for a while, and forget what's troubling you, even though reminders might slip in through the pointed social commentary.
ITSP deftly scratches the itch that many gamers have for this breed of
2D exploration and combat. It’s worth playing for any fan of the genre,
but it isn’t the brightest star in the sky.
Simple but polished gameplay is enhanced by an unforgettable tale, and Supergiant Games' debut emerges as one of Xbox Live Arcade's greatest adventures.
A good personal trainer isn’t just knowledgeable about fitness and diet,
he or she knows how to make exercise fun and how keep his or her pupil
motivated. THQ’s new
UFC Personal Trainer, on the other hand, is a complete pushover.
Super Mega Neo Climax takes the same concept and most of the same
adventures from the PSP original, adds a few new embellishments, and trashes the bonus modes
that didn’t work well. Shame about the art style.
Last year, EA came out with a great college
football product that captured the feeling of the sport. NCAA 12 builds
upon NCAA 11 with a list of improvements, but how much better is it?
Rather than tapping the shoot button repeatedly to take on the original's predictable,
slow-moving waves of enemies, Legions DX has you fighting back a
seemingly never-ending armada of thousands of enemy ships.
Rather than tapping the shoot button repeatedly to take on the original's predictable,
slow-moving waves of enemies, Legions DX has you fighting back a
seemingly never-ending armada of thousands of enemy ships.