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Sumo Digital ditches the wider world of Sega for its latest kart racer, but for all that's lost a new focus and inventiveness is found.
So much of this promising collaboration between id and Avalanche is unremarkable - but it's salvaged by bloody, brilliant combat.
Ambitious and sometimes overwhelming, Three Kingdoms does a great job of capturing the complexity of China's vivid past.
Children band together against the darkness of a collapsing France in this bleak and beautiful if somewhat rickety medieval fantasy.
A brisk free-roaming action game with a clicker-ish heart.
There's a lot to love about Mortal Kombat 11. The grind, though, can do one.
Aggelos treads a path many others have followed in recent years, but it does it all with a charm of its own.
A co-op shooter that's an unashamed throwback to Valve's all-time classic, complete with a few quirks of its own.
Stylish and punishing, this is a darkly compelling treat.
A frequently gorgeous, sadly generic open-world game that runs out of steam well before its extended play-time is over.
The systems run as deep as ever in Paradox's latest effort, though the personality isn't quite there.
A card-battling RPG enlivened with wit and character.
Inkle's follow-up to 80 Days is an archaeology adventure like no other.
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.