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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.
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.