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Halo Infinite's move to sort-of open world is a largely successful jumping off point for Halo's bold new future.
The combat is the highlight, frantic and cinematic, but Chorus' open-world narrative ambitions let it down.
It's a great concept, and it's perfectly enjoyable, but it lacks the excitement and flourishes it needs to really come alive.
A folk horror spectacle turned score-attacker that will give you nightmares in a matter of minutes.
This glorious game about movement and adventure also feels like a rumination on something deeper and more personal.
Moncage offers a gorgeous blend of narrative threads and teasing puzzles, that makes for a game of real elegance.
An otherworldly journey that runs out of things to do.
There are some neat new toys while Portal delivers the series at its best, but 2042 launches as the weakest Battlefield in some time.
The original Pok'mon Diamond and Pearl were strange, uneven games. The remakes file them down to something still enjoyable, but textureless.
ElecHead is an ingenious, compact, and elegant puzzle-platformer of wordless brilliance.
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.
Playground Games delivers yet another gorgeous and enveloping pocket holiday, smartly restructured but reassuringly unchanged.
Football Manager 2022 ramps up the emphasis on the modernness of today's game. It's the most accurate, most joyfully compulsive entry yet.
Ubisoft builds upon the framework of Steep with this enjoyably eccentric open world extreme sports adventure.
Offering a beautiful canvas to work with, Unpacking is a calm and tactile little sim about something most of us would usually dislike.
Hiroyuki Ito returns to the helm for the first time since Final Fantasy 12 in another brilliant examination of RPG fundamentals.
Golf is reduced to its rich essence here, but there's still room for plenty of secrets.
Back 4 Blood is a strange mix of old and new, but it works. The result is a delightfully scrappy hang-out shooter.
The mind behind Threes brings us this 'cosy-crunchy' turn-based adventure that's delightfully deep and brilliantly approachable.
Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy is enjoyable enough at times, but weighed down by a deluge of unnecessary systems and bullet-sponge combat.