Daniel Rubio
A video game that implements physical training circuits using the sensors and vibration of the Joy-Con, providing a wide variety of aerobic, short and intense exercises to sweat it out with, basically, a virtual instructor. A very good option to keep the body active even at home.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
A metroidvania that follows the basics of the genre to the letter and with a great artistic taste. Getting lost in the world and doing trial and error until you find the right path will be the norm, but that's how curiosity is born to explore this world and its mysterious history.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
Classic and new Sonic now merged in HD to bring fun and lots of replayability, although its PC version suffers from little technical improvement over the original title.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
An entertaining world with parodies of sword and magic fantasy with funny dialogues, a very strategic cooking mini-game and a well thought out resource manager. It can be a title that can serve as a rest, but not if you are looking for household planning, farming and farming.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
A work that adds some striking mechanics to the formula of so many other classic action RPGs, but without being enough to forge a unique identity that stands out from the rest of the indie proposals out there.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
More remaster than remake, it takes good advantage of the Joy-Con's gyroscope for gameplay. The feel of the game remains on the same lines as the original, but still suffers from other issues regarding accuracy and shooting. Still remains a short and enjoyable game with enough "patches" to these problems.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
A third-person shooter escaped from a PS2 catalog, both for the good and the bad. Form and style predominate over substance, with simple but thoroughly enjoyable gameplay elements.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
Action and fantasy RPG in which the shooter side of the game uses different magics. Its combat is challenging and fun, but its story and levels don't really shine.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
A 16-bit action platformer that doesn't change, but rather reformulates the most basic mechanics of the genre to give birth to exponentially challenging levels until the bitter >and sweet last moment of the story.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
Overall, The Creepy Syndrome has been a suggestive proposal of horror anthology that bets on experimenting with its narrative, artistic and playable themes, although unfortunately the lack of a more powerful common thread takes its toll.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
An action RPG with a striking shonen-like story that simmers, but the simplicity of the gameplay and its overall art design exerts too much of a counterbalance.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
Directed almost exclusively to Touhou Project fans. A work made with desire, but that plays a dirty trick to combine some mechanics of a genre (bullet hell) in a different one (action in side view).
Review in Spanish | Read full review
A 3D platformer that can grab you at first with the graceful water scrolling, but unfortunately doesn't go much further. Even some bugs, bad performance or broken physics at the end.
Review in Spanish | Read full review