Shannon P. Drake
Easy to start, but miles deep. THAT’S WAR, BABY!
Relentlessly stylish and relentlessly grindy turn-based tactical roguelike.
Fewer vampires and more Greeks! It’s Bronze Age Total War.
Fun combat and colorful world, but not a lot of depth outside that.
This may be Paradox’s best game and it’s about…family.
Interesting indie game that’s not quite as good as it wants to be, but still aims for the sky and hits.
At its heart, Empire of Sin does a little of everything and does none of it well.
Stubbs is emblematic of the end-of-lifecycle game in that it is extremely weird, kind of janky, and beloved by those who happened to pick it up in the game store, which was something we had way back then, because console games hadn’t invented online purchases yet.
There’s a good core but the rest of the game is the Diet Coke of Evil: Just one calorie, not evil enough.
They will make video games after this but they shouldn’t, perfection has been achieved.
Not a bad little diversion but there’s so many good pop/city management games now it’s not worth more than a few minutes.
Worth buying if you have a VR crew, but don’t buy a headset for it unless you want to die alone like me.
The video game equivalent of being picked up in a 2000 F-250 by a guy blasting Skynyrd and yelling HELL YEAH BROTHER at everything you say.
Great visuals, great voice acting, great sound, great music, shame the game is mediocre.
But if you’re looking for Vampire: The Masquerade and you are also old and you don’t want to play a janky battle royale, Vampire: the Masquerade – Swansong is…kinda interesting.
I found it compelling. Even if you don’t like tactical combat, you have to admire something so completely insane and very much its own thing when the world is busy making roguelike soulslikes platformers. It’s also an excuse to buy a cowboy hat of your very own.
Darkest Dungeon Circus Manager 2022.
I feel like you know if you want to give a World War 1 shooter a try. This is a niche thing and you know if you’re in it. Also hi, haven’t seen you at the niche meetings.
If you like roguelike deckbuilders, 80s action movies, and synthwave, Nitro Kid is a banger.
I think the real appeal of Victoria 3 and the series overall is it’s very self-directed. Picking one game can result in a completely different experience. Managing the diplomacy and economy of the British Empire at its peak is absolutely insane, then during the next run, you are trying to do things like “figure out how to even have diplomatic relations” and “wtf how do i economy???” in some backwater nation you are gracing with your benevolent rulership.