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A chaos of details and features come together for one of the Switch's most generous - and exhilarating - games.
A moody, well-wrought action role-player with striking, desolate landscapes and a couple of great dungeons.
A stylish and smart take on the beloved theme park formula, Parkitect is a winner.
Weather effects and party balloons see a knockabout charmer return in decent form.
Milestone delivers its most comprehensive, accessible and enjoyable racer yet - though it still suffers from some of the same old problems.
A blatantly unfinished and uninspired nostalgia project that sheds a certain, peculiar light on the immersive sim at large.
Darksiders' schlocky action makes a welcome return, though it's not enough to shake the feeling you've played this before - and better.
Bethesda's attempt at Fallout multiplayer is, like so many of the series' vaults, a failed experiment.
A strong if slim shooter that lays down strong foundations for the future, while feeling a little unfinished.
There are flashes of promise in this first-person shooter, but this is a mostly uninspired, unpolished waste of an opportunity.
Dull adventure game mechanics are enlivened by a brilliant sense of dread, as the Dark Souls director turns his hand to VR.
Toys for Bob delivers another beautifully restored slice of 90s nostalgia, although the mechanics could have also done with a polish.
Pok'mon's Switch debut deftly toes the line between returning fans and all-new ones, with a few small wobbles along the way.
Tetris gets the Tetsuya Mizuguchi makeover, to dazzling effect.
More Hitman: Season 2 than an experience in its own right, but a couple of great maps plus a fun competitive mode make for a solid fan pick.
The worst of pretentious story games and brainless beat-em-ups combined - with an insulting gimmick that's all its own.
The 'spiritual successor' industry reaches deep into the 90s game cupboard with this futuristic racer. Should we start asking why?
Patchy, chaotic but ultimately hilarious mini-game collection that proves Jackbox is still king of the party genre.
Quality of life tweaks and vast depth can't overcome Football Manager 2019's uncharacteristically clumsy, all-consuming training rework.
An astounding open world unlikely to be rivalled until well into the next gen, saddled by a throughline from the last.