Wesley Yin-Poole
The beautiful game at its most glorious, and its most grotesque.
With this surprise Switch exclusive, Nintendo has taken an old-school approach - for better and for worse.
PES 2020 is a patch or three away from being a very good game. As it stands, it's a weird mix of brilliant and broken.
When it's good, it's great. When it's bad it's frustrating. Everything in between is, well, Call of Duty.
Bleeding Edge could be on to something with meaningful updates, but at launch it's Xbox Game Pass filler at best.
The Resident Evil 3 remake, like the original upon which it is based, is inferior to its predecessor.
Don't bother with PES 2021 if you can option file PES 2020, but if you're coming in fresh, PES 2021 is a decent shout at a decent price.
Fun football with plenty of goals, but the grubby business of selling loot boxes lets the side down.
At launch, ahead of the release of the game's first season, Black Ops Cold War is a good shooter and a wonderful achievement, but it is far from being the great competitive multiplayer shooter it should be. I'm confident it can get there. Modern Warfare ended up with some fantastic updates during its first year of life, after all. So I'm sticking with Black Ops Cold War - for now.
In desperate need of depth and content, Destruction AllStars is at least a fun whiz around the corner.
Solid gameplay improvements overshadowed by the fact EA Sports still hasn't tackled FUT's loot box problem.
Vanguard won't join the pantheon of Call of Duty games, but it's a decent stop-gap for those waiting for Modern Warfare's return.
Street Fighter 2 on Switch is a disappointing release made worse by the rip-off price.
Bethesda's attempt at Fallout multiplayer is, like so many of the series' vaults, a failed experiment.
Generic and boring, Terminator: Resistance's only redeeming feature is its fan service.