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An impressive suite of improvements combine with a more clearly defined structure for Animal Crossing's finest outing to date.
An absorbing, tense and well-wrought samurai adventure let down by a little too much recycling and some muddled new systems.
Shades of Picross and Phoenix Wright blend together in this unlikely but utterly lovable genre mash-up.
Finally complete after fourteen years, Crowbar Collective's remake is more than faithful to Valve's masterpiece.
Eager to do the many issues of medieval life justice, Yes Your Grace can't hit a good balance between challenging and frustrating.
Pok'mon Mystery Dungeon DX is pleasant and cheery, but for every moment of depth there's an accompanying frustration.
Infliction is so middle-of-the-road you might get run over.
This hardcore off-road driving sim is focused and compelling, but just a bit too austere for its own good.
From its winning art to its calming music and puzzle design, Luna has a lot going for itself.
In combining an open world monster-rush format with PUBG-esque PvP, Crytek has crafted a stealth survival game like few others.
The setting is elegantly eerie, but this Gone-Home-inspired first-person mystery struggles to overcome its tired, melodramatic story.
Level-5's latest multimedia outing makes a belated western outing in an RPG that's eccentric, exuberant and more than a little clumsy.
Kunai throws a grappling hook and a fair amount of style into the Metroidvania genre for a solid if not stellar example of the form.
A gently interactive experience that will put a smile on your face.
A serene, quietly uplifting afternoon's entertainment for urban explorers and platform fans alike.
Cardboard Computer's elusive adventure game gets a final episode and a console edition, but don't wolf it all down at once.
Gentle anarchy reigns in this brilliantly humourous adventure.
While its fighting is fun, Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot doesn't do enough to carry the subpar side content.
Unable to combine the best of two beloved series, this JRPG can't really find its focus.
Wattam would be a simple little delight, if it weren't for its technical issues.