Though many of the series’ core elements remain intact, Gearbox has refined and reconfigured them in such ways that Borderlands 4 rises beyond anything the series has accomplished to this point.
Though many of the series’ core elements remain intact, Gearbox has refined and reconfigured them in such ways that Borderlands 4 rises beyond anything the series has accomplished to this point.
Hell is Us isn’t perfect, but it’s a bold and respectable debut that largely delivers on its puzzle-solving promise, despite middling combat and uneven storytelling.
If you’re in the mood for something that recalls games like Resident Evil 4 and Dead Space, Cronos might hit the spot. But it’s not without its pain points.
Shinobi: Art of Vengeance should serve as a blueprint for delivering a retro-facing experience of an absentee franchise while still leveraging modern technology and game design conventions.
Over the course of your adventure, you and the robot QT3 learn more about what makes insects, animals, and people tick. Most interestingly, you might actually learn a few things about yourself
Over the course of your adventure, you and the robot QT3 learn more about what makes insects, animals, and people tick. Most interestingly, you might actually learn a few things about yourself
Outside of a fictional animal giving us an unexpected eyeful, Peggle 2
doesn’t deviate from the series’ gameplay conventions, riding them to
great effect in a variety of nicely designed levels.
Risk of Rain
harkens back to an era when gamers had to play a game for several hours
before they really knew how it worked – a classic approach that can
still be fun.
As cute and entertaining as Zoo Tycoon can be, too much of the simulation is behind the glass. You’re free to look, but any sort of compelling interaction is kept out of reach.
Deadfall Adventures expands upon the lore of Quatermain, but tracing the genre back to its source material doesn't help this puzzle-infused shooter overcome its myriad, frustrating problems.