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For all the weirdness and fun it promises, Biomutant ends up a deeply conventional open-world action game.
Dorfromantik is sunshine on the screen, with a puzzling heart that will keep you busy for days.
Sumo Newcastle's debut is an engrossing but substanceless heist game - and an interestingly grim take on Robin Hood.
Wrath of the Druids is a meaty expansion which succeeds in taking Valhalla to new shores, even if the path sometimes feels familiar.
Capcom's follow-up to its first-person Resi reinvention is a fantastic horror romp - for its first half, at least.
Enjoyably traditional, if a little tatty in places, this is a shooting game that still stands apart from all others.
In Returnal, Housemarque builds a game on both euphoric highs and confounding lows.
New Pok'mon Snap captures the strange joy of the original game without being derivative.
A safe choice for fans, this slight reimagining turns a weak game into an okay one.
A simple but quietly captivating 3D collectathon with a gorgeous setting.
Trials of Fire is a complex but seductive deck-building strategy game about sculpting the perfect RPG team.
Abe's Exoddus gets a generous upgrade in this slightly patchy adventure.
After a disastrous launch People Can Fly's third-person sci-fi adventure emerges as a smart if familiar shooter.
Surreal, enigmatic and often sloppily executed, Balan Wonderworld is a 90s throwback that might be too period correct for some.
This cosmic point-and-click looks and feels like no other game out there.
If you can ignore the story, It Takes Two has some of the best co-op gameplay in years.
With smart additions that move the series forward, this is the most accessible, deepest and simply very best Monster Hunter to date.
A neat aesthetic can't disguise poor combat and a lack of anything to do.
Fast, slick but with a few too many flaws, Pacer is nevertheless a fine futuristic racer.
Superliminal meets The Unfinished Swan in an admirable debut effort from Grateful Decay, that's best when it sticks to the ingenous premise.