Bruno Galvão
This new sequel from Gust has a nice and sweet charisma that makes it easy to play, but it's not quite superior to what came before.
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An energetic team fighter that keeps the arcade feeling alive. Veteran players will love it, mas there's a lack of offline content here.
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The original Musou series needs to reinvent itself urgently. Following the usual path just highlights how pale it stands next to the colabs.
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Another awsome indie that takes ideias from other games to combine with some of its own to give you somenting that needs attention and time.
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Danganronpa is much more than what you expect from a visual novel. The stories, characters and diversified gameplay capture your attention.
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Two sublime cinematic action-adventure experiences like no other in the industry, but these remasters do not have major highlights.
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It's a different game with fun combats, but the plot, structure and some technical issues don't let it shine.
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Shin Megami Tensei 5 differs precisely in the way the strategic combat system shines and how the overall experience is set to never trivialize it.
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Neo Cab asks a lot of interesting questions about precariousness, automation, social control through technology, data usage, and especially how to hold on to your humanity in a monopoly under unregulated capitalism. The execution of the game is questionable, but it can be worth it to give it a look for fans of narrative-focused experiences.
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Zombotron is interesting and noteworthy, but the repetition makes the game tiring. For those that don't have the patience to repeat the same level, again and again, the alternative is to get good or get out.
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flOwer fit perfectly into my PlayStation 3 and my life as a gamer in 2009. It motivated a whole search for similar experiences that would lead to the inspiring Journey. Now, in 2013 we have the PlayStation 4 version that for all its merits manages to present the game almost as if it were released today for the first time. For those who have let the years pass and left flOwer forgotten on their PS3, this is a free prize that you deserve to give to yourself and the game, while for those who are only now getting to know it, it is more than mandatory. Calling it a game feels like we're putting it down, because it's much more than that.
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