Chad Sapieha
Chad Sapieha's Reviews
Nintendo's new social simulator for 3DS teaches Post Arcade's junior reviewer a couple of things about herself
From a gravity glove copped from Half-Life to a story with too many missing pieces, Gatling Goat's first game never finds firm footing
Kickstarter-funded adventure game grabs its audience with a Native American horror hook, then lets it wiggle free with monotonous play.
Sweden's Frictional Games has knocked it out of the park this time, but the less you know about their latest game prior to playing the better
[My daughter] told me several times over the last week that this was her favourite toys-to-life game yet. And speaking as both a gamer and a parent I can't find much wrong with her reasoning. Skylanders SuperChargers has great toys and loads of fun stuff to do. Better still, it isn't (necessarily) going to break the bank. It gets my dad stamp of approval.
Indie world builder puts players at the mercy of petulant deities with unknowable minds
[C]ome December, when I'm looking back at my favourite gaming memories of 2015, I suspect Lovers in a Dangerous Spacetime will be sitting pretty near the top.
Not the same as the Vita game but not a sequel either, Unfolded is sweet, refreshing fun mixed with a hint of disappointment
[M]uch like the Max of the movies, there's something about this road warrior to which I've become attached.
Turn 10's latest racer is a bit bolder than Forza 5, but still doesn't constitute a turning point for the aging sim category
And that's Super Mario Maker in a nutshell: Making and playing. It might seem small and perhaps even insubstantial on the surface, but it offers nearly limitless creative potential as well as a virtually endless selection of player-made courses to try. It's not going to be Nintendo's next Super Smash Bros., but Super Mario Maker is something close to essential for anyone who's ever played a Super Mario Bros. game and thought: You know, I think I could do that.
The new Disney Infinity gives us less than ever before with the promise of more for those willing to pay for it
It's been a bumpier ride than I'd expected – especially given the potential comic goldmine that is the Borderlands universe – but Tales from the Borderlands seems to be back on track just in time for what's shaping up to be weird and wild final episode.
The Coalition's visually upgraded version of Epic Games' classic shooter is an optical treat content to preserve the original's (now slightly clunky) mechanics
Indeed, Toy Soldiers: War Chest does a very good job of mimicking the godlike feeling that drives kids to wage huge wars on basement battlefields – all the more so because of the game's full embrace of its toy motif.
Bulgaria-based Haemimont Games has wrought a fun if sometimes repetitive action RPG with dozens of hours of monster-infested dungeons to wade through
My experience with Everybody's Gone to the Rapture was one of delight and wonder punctuated by many unfortunately long stretches of interface frustration.
Indie 2D space shooter is crazy hard and has an unusual interface, but deserves respect for being exactly the game its creators wanted to make
It's a wild ride of a fight that serves as a fitting end to the always intense Exo Zombies mode, and a fun conclusion to Advanced Warfare, one of the most original and innovative Call of Duty games in years.
Rare's massive game collection serves not just as entertainment but also a retrospective of the medium's growth over several decades