Elizabeth Lovatt
Elizabeth Lovatt's Reviews
An amusing and beautiful way to spend a few hours. Don't forget to send a postcard.
An average enough experience while it lasts, the best thing about this easy and short puzzler is the visuals, but the credit for that really lies with Fritz Kahn.
Crafted to the highest calibre, fans of Yoshi old and new will find a plethora of collectables and platforming fun to keep them occupied and delighted throughout its joyful, laid-back levels.
Only fiddly controls and minor pacing issues mar a melancholic and affecting story, simply and refreshingly told.
If you're looking for something short, sweet and bound to make you smile, you won't be let down by Pikuniku's infectious charm and gameplay.
Small character moments and mechanics make for an enjoyable take on surveillance and spying, but its grander political message is lost in the shadows.
You're better off sticking to reality and avoiding this confused and cliched state of mind.
With enough lols and charm to patch over any holes (sorry, last one) in its simple, but delightful mechanics and story.
Frantic, inventive combat combined with charming visuals and humour make this the only rogue-lite, Metroidvania action-platformer you need right now.
A solid set of enhancements brings NEXT ever closer to the game No Man's Sky wants to be but forgets to have fun in the process.
More of the same from Stoic: small tweaks improve the variety of skirmishes, and the outstanding visuals, sound and narrative make this a saga long to be remembered.
Not quite an ace, but a respectable new addition to the series, multiplayer mayhem saves a disappointing single-player mode.
If you have the patience to overlook a few pacing issues and dodgy lip syncs, Life is Strange offers up a mature, nuanced story which centres on female friendship (and maybe romance) and the effect our actions have on others.