Evan Norris
- The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
- Deus Ex
- Halo: Combat Evolved
Evan Norris's Reviews
A nice add-on for franchise completionists but largely superfluous for more casual fans, especially when weighed against the strength and value of vanilla MK11.
It's a relatively short game with a modest amount of trial and error, but its mechanics, level designs, and quality-of-life features make it a must-play for shoot-em-up fans.
Due to its opaque nature and punishing action, Resolutiion will appeal mostly to fans of dangerous souls-like combat and abstruse exploration in the vein of the original NES Zelda.
Island Saver is not a good game but, considering its raison d'être, it could be worse.
Red Wings has a lot of good ideas and a strong foundation... yet poor storytelling, monotonous mission design, and unsatisfactory specialty stages ultimately drag this airborne adventure back down to Earth.
Mega Mix is a solid celebration of ten years of Hatsune Miku.
It took five years for Fury Unleashed to find its voice, but the wait was worth it.
FDG and Pixel Licker could have replicated the original Slayin experience, slapped on a new coat of paint, published on Switch, and called it a day. Instead the studio transformed the rogue-like template into a more substantial role-playing adventure complete with story, side-quests, secrets, unlockable characters, and upgrades aplenty.
The streets are paved with gold in Streets of Rage 4.
While the Switch version inherits the original game's unvaried, repetitive gameplay and short-lived sessions, it mitigates those issues thanks to online leaderboards, a brand new AGES mode, and a moving arcade cabinet display—no quarters required.
Those that gravitate toward serene sandbox simulation will find in New Horizons a game to play for weeks, months, and even years.
Capcom's struggles with Resident Evil multiplayer continue with Resistance.
Cat Girl Without Salad: Amuse-Bouche began its life as an April Fool's prank, so its inadequacies as a game aren't shocking.
Combat is cumbersome and resource gathering tedious at times, but successes in environmental storytelling, ambient sound, survival gameplay, and character progression help mask those flaws.
Gratifying action-adventure gameplay, tense enemy encounters, visceral gunplay, and excellent graphics make it a solid entry in the long-running horror franchise.
An extraordinary achievement.
Underhero serves as a reasonable replacement until Nintendo decides the future of its papercraft franchise.
The characters are layered and sympathetic; the twisting, turning plotline engaging; and the moral dilemmas fascinating in their unintended consequences.
A decent endeavor by one of the industry's premiere indie developers.
The best and most flexible way to experience these NES and Famicom titles.