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This frantic game of kitchen co-operation is farcical couch co-op at its finest.
Unique and visually striking, Abzu doesn't quite make the most of its underwater setting but remains a highly compelling adventure.
This scrappy, surreal escapade cleverly uses programming as a game mechanic, but can't quite follow through on its ideas.
Double Fine's head-spinning sci-fi puzzler has plenty of style but not enough substance to sustain its lengthy adventure.
A breezy sci-fi adventure emboldened by its use of VR that is undone by its mundane underpinnings.
Not just a loving tribute to the JRPGs of the 90s, I Am Setsuna tells a memorable tale, with a few bright design jewels of its own.
Have no fear of this ruining your childhood; it barely tries hard enough to ruin your afternoon.
This Kinect swansong shows that there was strange potential lurking within the peripheral after all.
A stylish roguelike both made and hampered by its own pacing.
The fresh arts and styles help mask the musty taste of recycled material, but Generations is still a new recipe with old ingredients.
A lovely setting can't quite make up for a game that plays things a little too safely.
A stylish, mechanically polished boss rush game, Furi effectively channels the spirit of Punch-Out!! to make for an unexpected gem.
A painfully undercooked Japanese RPG that shows how far the genre has fallen behind its western rivals.
Lego Star Wars reinvents itself enough to avoid the usual critiques of its gameplay, only to fall short trying to stretch out its story.
Playdead's follow-up to Limbo is a superior game in every way.
After over 25 years, Kick Off is back. But even for a budget proposition, the stripped-back package seems too miserly to be truly enjoy.
Capcom's oddest Resident Evil spin-off yet is also its scrappiest, with uneven execution obscuring an otherwise entertaining online shooter.
Tokyo Mirage Sessions: #FE is an imperfect yet brilliant marriage of two beloved franchises.
A woeful continuation of the Blood Dragon universe that splices Trials' brilliant handling with some torturously bad subgames.
A tribute to and evolution of Keiji Infaune's Mega Man, Mighty No. 9's moments of brilliance are tempered by its preposterous challenge.