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Shadow Gambit: The Cursed Crew is a cerebral but hugely characterful stealth tactics game filled with creativity and depth. And fun pirate stuff.
With excellent stagecraft and meticulous detail, Baldur's Gate 3 conjures the illusion of perfect freedom - and then it disappears.
Wholesome, harmonious and completely unwilling to settle, this is one of the most generous games in years.
Frontier's annual management sim offers some small refinements over its predecessor but a lack of major upgrades means it doesn't snatch pole.
Absurd, unrelenting and endlessly creative, Turbo Overkill is a masterfully composed symphony of violence.
A fascinating but flawed experimental musical game that fails to live up to some heavenly potential.
Atlas Fallen echoes other mid-00s slashers with fun melee combat and cool ideas, trapped in a run-of-the-mill open world.
Food and family converge in this beautiful slice-of-life tale.
Remnant 2 is an ambitious sequel stuffed with delightful - and deadly - surprises.
An expressive, characterful entry point for metroidvanias.
A standard management sim with a coat of cosy paint lies under the short-lived novelty of using love as a resource.
Bullet hell games bust through into wild new territory with this fidgety arcade treat.
The Pikmin series blossoms anew, in a bouquet of fresh gameplay and the best of its roots.
It's a sight for saur eyes, but not quite enough to make Exoprimal essential. There's real cleverness to the PvPvE balance, and to how Leviathan modifies that one, core mode as the game unfolds, but after 15 hours, it still feels like an exercise in reshuffling well-worn pieces. I don't think it earns that blockbuster price tag. As a subscription game, though, Exoprimal is dino-mite.
Wander and chat through a night of spooky possibilities.
A beautifully written and illustrated tale of young people trying to change their world, which comes alive on replay.
A Capcom charmer returns from the dead with a definitive remaster .
Trails into Reverie is a fine epilogue for Crossbell and Cold Steel arcs, offering necessary closure and clear hints about the series' future.
A neon-lit murder mystery unable to uncover a deeper core.
Limited enemies and environments don't hamper some of the best VR blasting out there.