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The spirit of Burnout returns in a game that trades big-budget spectacle for pure speed.
A new developer doesn't rock the boat in what's an enjoyable if only gently iterative outing for the construction and management sim.
An action-packed, if anticlimactic, close to Clementine's journey.
Heart-stopping swordfights and deft, panoramic stealth waged across another vast, gorgeously rancid From Software landscape.
We. The Revolution is a fascinating and provoking descent into a judge's buckled shoes during the French Revolution.
Gentle and generous, Good-Feel delivers its best game yet in this imaginative and breezy platformer.
A moody shooter undermined by a lack of polish and purpose.
A witty and smitten recreation of a time gone by, which you'll forgive tedium if you share in the nostalgia.
The Division 2 manages to improve upon the original formula in almost every way, but its tale and tone are frequently awful.
Sokoban and coding collide in this clever puzzler.
A couple of omissions grate and it's hardly cheap, but this is a sumptuous collection for the grandest of shmups.
This unlikely Front Mission spin-off's occasional charm can't make up for its seriously broken fundamentals.
Capcom returns to its trusted formula for something that plays like a outrageously pretty PS2 game - and that's a very good thing.
A tense, imaginative thriller that buckles under the weight of its own ambition.
5pb's 2009 visual novel gets a sizeable makeover - but don't expect it to make new fans for the genre.
Dead or Alive 6 stumbles into 2019 like a drunken uncle staggers onto the dancefloor at a wedding: past it and likely to embarrass.
Ape Out is a beautiful and bloody game that's given surprising depth by a tremendous soundtrack.
With a deep love of classics such as Thunder Force, Gradius and Darius, this horizontal shmup goes well beyond a simple cover version.
An insidious, combat-free horror escapade that works marvels in a tiny space - and an intricate portrait of family and superstition
Beautiful, broken, with flashes of brilliance, Anthem is a disorganised mess in search of a reason to be.