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Missing the elegance of FromSoftware, Lords of the Fallen is let down by Soulslike clichés and performance woes.
A serviceable, sometimes-engaging official Star Trek version of Stellaris that makes sense for generic space war fans, but flounders when it comes to narrative logic and Trekkie authenticity.
A crew searches a watery world for a missing friend in this evocative game of exploration and conversation.
Dull warfare mars a fascinating battle for supremacy during the late Bronze Age collapse.
A shallow shooter that doesn't offer anywhere near enough bang for your ill-gotten buck.
Developer Harebrained Schemes returns with an evocative and pulpy tactical adventure, where enjoyable turn-based combat just about offsets some woeful real-time stealth.
A generous and lavish racer, with thrilling driving, that wants you for the long haul.
Golden Age Baghdad, along with a return to a more focused, stealth-based design, makes for a rich and characterful adventure.
Detective Pikachu Returns is a straightforward mystery adventure whose strengths lie in its Pokémon setting and breakout star.
Worlds sit within worlds in this properly magical puzzle adventure.
With the license gone this is the beginning of a new era, but it feels like business as usual - for better and for worse.
Demake visuals are the perfect match for a game that's both direct and gloriously weird.
2021's groundbreaking Wikipedia ARG returns with new art and fungal sidestories – and a superb execution of its multi-layered, misinformation murder mystery.
Mortal Kombat 1 envisions an exciting future with fluid combat, a fantastic story mode, and superb visuals - but receding features, underbaked mechanics, and a dated online experience keep it in the past.
An open-world Hawaii and a generously spirited racer, chafed by always-online irritations and a lack of originality.
A wide range of systems make Dune: Spice Wars an enjoyable 4X, but the depth of Frank Herbert's world-building is largely lost in translation.
Arkham-esque combat and lovely platforming combine in this joyous and colourful game.
Starfield pairs near-impossible breadth with a classic Bethesda aptitude for systemic physics, magnetic sidequests, and weird vignettes. But in sacrificing direct exploration for the sake of sheer scale, there's nothing to bind it together.
Lies of P has strong enough foundations in its edgy tone and tweaked weapons to provide an enjoyable experience for those in need of a FromSoft fix.
Crack a handful of languages and then wield them in this mesmering adventure game.