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The Alters achieves something tense and new by merging strategy base-building with third-person exploration and a sci-fi story about cloning yourself. But repetition and complicated busywork mar the overall effect.
Mario Kart World offers neat twists on the classic Mario Kart formula, but its open-world ambitions are somewhat let down by some classic Nintendo quirkiness.
At times, Welcome Tour is Nintendo's Fantasia.
FromSoftware's multiplayer spin-off is an exhilarating rush and a celebration of the studio's prior achievements Souls veterans will devour.
Blades of Fire manages to feel original, lovable, and born of genuine passion, despite the near overwhelming number of problems that could have extinguished it.
By turns minimalist and luxurious, this is a thrilling exploration of the art of photography.
Here's a more grounded Doom, but one that's as brisk and playful as ever.
A wondrous dreamlike world to explore in or out of VR, but a story that doesn't always hit as hard as you might want.
A zany, knockabout co-op action adventure that's kaleidoscopically colourful but wears you out before you get to the good stuff.
Despelote's creators tell a remarkable, pseudo-autobiographical tale about football, Ecuador, and community - but also one about the act of remembering, and the creative act itself.
Ingenious and characterful, this immersive sim is an absolute delight - particularly when things go wrong.
Part management sim, part open-world adventure, this is both weird and familiar, and deeply comforting stuff.
Outstanding artwork and glorious combat bring Clair Obscur: Expedition 33's bold, painterly world to life.
Acclaimed point-and-click studio Wadjet Eye's gently paced, time-travelling genre-hopper blends elegant puzzling and intricate, affecting storytelling to beautiful effect.
A masterful sequel to one of the genre's most beloved games, but it carries an ink stain that's hard to ignore.
Stronger emotional stakes and faster-paced drama promise an explosive climax that ultimately pulls its biggest punch.
I wanted more strange possibilities from the spaces I lived around. With Blue Prince I get that. What an extraordinary game this is.
This is a game of just remarkable craft - we've not even mentioned the stop-motion style of animation! It's lovely - and likewise remarkable attention, thought, and care. If only just a little more of that care had been afforded to the playing of it.
If you can get over a difficult start and fancy a lean take on the survival genre, Atomfall delivers an intriguing tale worth discovering.
Not all its additions are for the better, but this excavation of Monolith Soft's alien opus remains as fascinating and enthralling as it was a decade ago.