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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.
Square Enix's line of retro JRPGs continues with an all-new world and tale for Bravely Default, though some of the old problems persist.
Beautiful difficulty options open out a game of beautiful difficulty.
An unusual setup, interesting characters and tongue-in-cheek writing make Astrologaster one of the most fun visual novels around.
A brilliant central mechanic and a game of real craft and character.
3D World's feast of all things Mario is joined by a fittingly experimental, hugely enjoyable - if slightly scrappy - expansion.
Persona 5 Strikers is a full-on sequel that tells an engrossing new story, even if its combat doesn't quite have the same wow factor.
Tarsier returns with another slice of horror that's just about glorious enough to make up for the frustrations.
Fun at times but also scruffy and repetitive, Werewolf: The Apocalypse - Earthblood lacks a bit of bite.
In desperate need of depth and content, Destruction AllStars is at least a fun whiz around the corner.
Numinous landscapes and skull-rattling combat combine in this leftfield classic
An eerie, hypnotic sleuther - and a cracking first effort from a miniature team.
Bloober Team goes back to the classics for possibly its best effort yet.
Embrace the bucolic life as a grad student tracking some squirrels across a forest in this unique narrative puzzler.
Meanwhile, it's clear that next-gen consoles get a more refined, smoother and prettier experience - even if there is the sense that Hitman 3 isn't specifically targeting the capabilities of the new hardware. But when a game looks as good as this, runs as well as this and features some superb new missions, it's difficult to complain.
IO's final World of Assassination game is closer to a seasonal content update than a sequel, but it's a thrilling endeavour all the same.