Rachel Watts
An energy infused concoction of style, action, and music that will give you one heck of a musical hangover.
Fuser feels like a natural evolution for Harmonix and, scoring system aside, lets players take control of the music more than ever before.
Twin Mirror begins with an intriguing set-up but, disappointingly, ends up going nowhere.
Omori's ending is brutal, but its characters and humour put some heart behind the horror.
An excellent co-op adventure that doesn't take itself too seriously, and that's the only place it falls short.
Narita Boy's digital twist on a classic fantasy tale is engrossing if a bit disorientating.
What makes the previous Shelter games shine is their ability to show nature as both awe-inspiring and completely terrifying, but Shelter 3 fails to capture that. It breaks my heart since you can see the ideas and concepts of a great survival game, but the execution just isn't there.
A little abstract in nature, but Genesis Noir is an all-around stunning audio-visual adventure.
Piloting insect mechs in a beautifully tiny world is a breeze, but heavy resource grinding stops this adventure taking full flight.
The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles has the rush of excitement of the courtroom but chooses melodrama over mystery.
Visually gorgeous and emotionally raw, True Colors is an incredible continuation of the Life is Strange series.
An eye-popping musical adventure that will leave you with a serious case of galaxy brain.
Jett: Far From Shore has some epic highs but fiddly ship controls and unanswered questions weigh this space adventure down.
An inviting art gallery MMO where you can buy art, slap it on some walls, and then invite people to visit.
A cosy adventure about trading items with frog folk on a peaceful island. Solve puzzles, find secrets, get friendly with the locals - all the good stuff.
Play as a mother fox looking for her missing cub in a post-apocalyptic future where Earth is slowly dying. A scrappy survival tale with moments of tension and tenderness.
A point-and-click Agatha Christie 'em up about a detective giraffe solving a murder on a mysterious island in the 1920s. What it lacks any real detective work, though, it makes up for in pure charm.
A heartfelt adventure that balances the poetic nature of academia with the harsh reality of a world on the brink of war.
Its roguelike elements and course designs feel like a swing and a miss, but Cursed To Golf has plenty of visual charm and is a fun throwback to Flash-era golfing games of bygones past.
A fun Pikmin-like with tight platforming, cute critters, and a cluttered house full of exploration potential.