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Navigate a world of information and folklore in this memorably moody visual novel.
The reverse city builder is trickier than it appears, but utterly committed to its environmental vision, taking the genre - and every level - to new places.
Blending fishing with Gothic horror and Lovecraft is a fine hook, but Dredge is too defined by simple loot-and-upgrade rhythms to reel you in.
A glorious spell of island hopping, with some surprisingly nasty moments.
Keeping what works while reimagining what doesn't, this is about as good as remakes get.
A beautifully crafted exploration game brimming with combat and puzzles.
A brilliant musical puzzler that sends you out into the world enriched and filled with curiosity.
Trails to Azure is an important second entry to the Crossbell saga, adding some neat touches and forming two parts of a whole with Trails From Zero.
A half-interesting game is buried by a mess of its own making - and represents an industry conundrum that will only continue to grow.
Team Ninja evolves Nioh's formula in a Three Kingdoms-era action RPG where allies, flags, and stealth make its brutal challenges more manageable than ever.
Mixing Into the Breach with Frozen Synapse makes for an inevitably strong core of mech combat, but the rest of Phantom Brigade is underwhelming.
Give yourself to this elegant and empathetic study of solitude.
A quartet of classic arcade shooters from a genre powerhouse get a decent modernisation, capturing the moment the genre strutted towards bullet hell.
Chaos is actually choreography, as an unreleased Atari arcade game gets the full Minter treatment.
Navigating a tonal minefield with just enough confidence, Company of Heroes 3 is a big, refined, and beautifully textured addition to an already brilliant series.
The long overdue samurai spin-off is classic Yakuza under its period dressing but also underwhelming as a current-gen remake.
Far more than just a Monster Hunter clone, Wild Hearts exceeds expectations and then some, mixing streamlined action with inventive new toys.
As a technical showcase for what's possible with PSVR2 Call of the Mountain excels, even if its world and mechanics sometimes fall short.
All the confusing yet irresistible energy of early-noughties double-A gaming, marred by awful writing and a core gimmick that doesn't ignite.
Vibrant and self-assured, Hi-Fi rush happily embraces the 00s' cheese - and is all the better for it.