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Telling Lies, by contrast, is but a second baby step into uncharted territory: a little wobbly, a little naive. But definitely courageous and exciting.
Told with nerdish detail - and limited production values - Train Sim World 2020 might surprise you.
A thrillingly authentic take on the first-person shooter's 90s heyday, delivered with nerdish enthusiasm.
A quest to find phone signal leads to a glorious game of exploration and reconnection.
A one-of-a-kind splicing of PS1 with 16-bit aesthetics and formal conventions, streaked with self-aware humour, sorrow and yearning.
Competent strategy pastes flat-footed, surface-level sci-fi over a genre that lives and dies by its nuance.
A masterpiece of absurdist theatre, and a damn fine double-A mech game too.
Impressive heritage and a handful of neat ideas bubble beneath this co-op horror, though they're both ultimately squandered.
Two players, two developers, but half the story: this spin-off isn't firing on all cylinders, but the combat is still hugely satisfying.
Fire Emblem goes back to school for the most epic, generous and dynamic outing for the series yet.
With this surprise Switch exclusive, Nintendo has taken an old-school approach - for better and for worse.
Atmosphere rules in this narrative game about a cabbie on the trail of a killer.
Sterling hack-and-slash combat meets raw, fractured prose in one of gaming's most essential nightmares.
A homage to the genre-blending classic ActRaiser that never quite gets off the ground.
The Minecraft and Dragon Quest mash-up gets refined for the sequel, with a few other outside influences helping make it a laid-back joy.
A brief, frequently beautiful meditation on mental illness that can be overly blunt in its messaging.
Retro charm can't hide dull design in a game that, almost impossibly, has no clear audience.
Two designs collide gloriously in a Zelda variation that rivals the greatness of the core games themselves.
A quirky and powerful construction toy that's fun to play with even if you aren't trying to make anything.
Frogware's most ambitious title to date sees it take on the Cthulu mythos, but unfortunately it makes for one of its most flawed games too.