Timothy Taylor
Vaporum: Lockdown should satisfy those looking for a first-person dungeon crawler with a unique aesthetic – but only if you can get past its shortcomings.
Only nostalgia seekers will find joy in this unforgiving, budget-friendly adventure inspired by the 2D Zelda games of yore.
Frustrations aside, Legends of Ethernal is a decent step in the right direction for first-time studio Lucid Dreams.
While an easy recommendation for fans of the anime, Infinite Combate may be perceived as a pricey, mediocre experience for average RPG consumer.
Will the nostalgia shine through in Convoy, or will its brutal difficulty leave it abandoned in the roguelike wasteland?
Space Pioneer is fun in short bursts, but will a lack of originality keep it from escaping the gravity of mediocrity?
Reel Fishing offers a story that will lure you in and some good gameplay mechanics that might make you bite, but unfortunately the total package just wasn’t enough to pull me to the boat.
Nordic strategy and crippling depression combine to make Dead in Vinland a compelling and frustrating experience.
There is so much about this game that left me feeling that it was close to being the love letter to old school RPGs that it aspired to be. However, it manages to come up just short with its best features while going way overboard with its worst. LeGrand Legacy will provide you with about 30 or so hours of gameplay, but you can stretch it out to 40 if you care to comb through limitless walls of text to find the deepest details of the history of LeGrand. There is a respectable amount of content here that will only cost you about $20 USD, but unfortunately, I simply can’t recommend the Switch version at this time.
Will the story and entertaining combat be enough to overcome Neverwinter Nights’ troubling performance issues? Errrm…