Dan Ryckert
There is no reason you should ever play this game
It may share a genre and universe with Saints Row, but Agents of Mayhem is a lifeless husk of Volition's prior work.
Electronic Arts makes missteps at every turn in this fundamentally flawed follow-up.
A dreadful combat system brings down an otherwise beautiful and funny Mario adventure.
It's the Star Fox game you wanted...in 2002.
Ten years later, this frustrating follow-up to Canvas Curse feels shallow and soulless by comparison.
Good luck finding three friends that will waste their time with this
You'd do yourself a favor by watching the movies again in lieu of playing this game
Nintendo's newest IP delivers on tone and fleeting fun, but struggles to sink its hooks in.
Firaxis delivers a fantastic sequel in many regards, but a large assortment of technical issues plague the overall experience.
Slick production values, solid controls, and tons of fan service can't make up for mediocre progression and a lack of content.
This odd Wii U collaboration plays like a guided tour of The Legend of Zelda's most iconic locations and characters. The price of admission? Playing a bunch of Dynasty Warriors.
The little mushroom man finally gets his name on the marquee, and the result is a charming, unique, and puzzle-heavy adventure.
The chaos and fun of Saints Row is fully intact in the underworld, but a new setting can only go so far.
Could be fun for nostalgia buffs, but don't expect any innovation
Perfectly playable and sometimes a nice challenge, but lacks its own identity
It's fun nostalgia, but that's about it
Sparks of Hope wasn’t on my radar after my middling experience with Kingdom Battle, but I love it when a game surprises me like this. It takes just a handful of battles for the hooks to get in, and the tactical options only grow as you unlock new heroes and sparks. I’m not sure if any game could be good enough to make me love the Rabbids, but the fun I was having in my 30+ hours with Sparks of Hope did a great job of distracting me from their dumb, dumb faces.
Capcom brings the series back to its roots while making it all feel new again.
Parker, Stone, and Ubisoft deliver with a bigger, longer, and better follow-up to The Stick of Truth.