Kevin Dunsmore
In 2016, Square Enix released Final Fantasy XV. Like Kingdom Hearts III, XV launched with obviously missing content, plot holes and features.
The classic Call of Duty: Modern Warfare trilogy remains one of the best trilogies in gaming history.
The Plants vs.
The cycle of Destiny whiplash continues with Destiny 2: Shadowkeep. Like during the Destiny 1 era, we started with a lackluster opening, then got two awful expansions, got our significant overhaul, and now we're at the stopgap.
The phrase, "doesn't do anything particularly new," is apt to describe Borderlands 3.
Wolfenstein: Youngblood begins with Soph and Jess killing their first Nazi and ends with both caked in blood from their conquests.
Bethesda Softworks has done great work reinvigorating its library of IPs over the past few years.
Like the winding roads of Farewell Wilderness that contain both serenity and danger, Days Gone is a journey with a winding range of emotions.
The ever-flowing nature of time meant we'd eventually return to an Armageddon level event.
Death is one of many constants players have come to expect from a From Software title alongside a well-designed world, a gameplay loop that rewards risk and experimentation, and a fair challenge.
Sumo Digital have finally delivered Crackdown 3 after five years, but it feels like a product of a bygone era.
After seventeen years, the Dark Seeker saga finally comes to its emotional conclusion.
Just Cause 4 is a tale of two games.
It feels good to have Treyarch back at the helm with Call of Duty: Black Ops 4.
There's no beating around the bush that Destiny 2 was a disaster.
Vengeance may not be what Kratos seeks anymore, but that has done little to stop the God of War franchise.
As the successor to the PSP hits, Dissidia Final Fantasy NT does a lot of things right but gets a lot wrong.
Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth – Hacker's Memory may not be a true sequel to the 2016 original, but it's a better version of a familiar experience.
In the same year we got great expansions like The Frozen Wilds for Horizon Zero Dawn, Defiant Honor for Nioh and In The Name of the Tsar for Battlefield 1, it's amazing how dull Destiny 2 – Expansion I: Curse of Osiris is.
Dead Rising 4: Frank's Big Package does what a proper re-release should, packaging the base game together with all DLC and a smidgen of exciting new content.