Chad Sapieha
Chad Sapieha's Reviews
Meaningful evolutionary changes and an innovative multiplayer mode help this sequel live up to the original
Microsoft's Windows 8-exclusive top-down shooter looks and sounds like a Halo game, but lacks the drama and spectacle of its Xbox cousins
It may make you break your GamePad, but Ubisoft's colourful adventure is one of the best plumber-free platformers you'll find
With four very distinct modes – each essentially it's own deep and polished game – Ghosts delivers serious value for military FPS fans
It's a dazzling game to behold, but does it have that special magic that will turn it into a hardware-selling blockbuster?
SCE Japan Studio's pretty-looking, all-ages action game isn't essential, but it's fun for both adults and their tween kids.
Frontier Developments' park sim is gorgeous, does a fine job exploiting Kinect, and is surprisingly fun regardless of age.
Capcom Vancouver's Xbox One exclusive won't win any storytelling awards, but it's an undeniable spectacle of undead mayhem.
Turn 10's Xbox One debut delivers magnificent graphics and excellent car physics, but its primary mode follows an old and well-worn road.
Crytek's visceral Xbox One launch exclusive melds strategic split-second decision making with some truly vicious Roman combat
Media Molecule's latest is a profoundly innovative platformer that empowers players to make real papercraft models of most everything they see in the game.
Sure, you get to take control of loads of loveable characters, but broad-smiling fun is as elusive as Jamaican bobsledding gold
Zoe Mode's Xbox One golf game delivers the bare essentials, plus a few unappealing frills.
A daring premise and fearless hero make Freedom Cry a bold, if not quite completely satisfying, supplement to Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag
It's a hoot while it lasts, but the Xbox One-exclusive sequel to PopCap's popular puzzler feels a bit abbreviated.
Sequel to Max & the Magic Marker is filled with clever conundrums, suffers from trial-and-error action sequences
Final game in Nintendo's Year of Luigi sends Mario's younger brother out with a bang
Indie studio's massive crowd-funding campaign results in a very enjoyable – if perhaps overly easy – point-and-click adventure game
TT Games' terrific take on the Warner Bros. film is an ode to building bricks; a Lego game made for Lego lovers
Silicon Studios and Square Enix have delivered an almost classic, very Final Fantasy-esque Japanese role-playing game for Nintendo 3DS