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Punishing and precise, Firaxis has created one of the most demanding - and thrilling - strategy games ever.
Blackbird Interactive crafts a worthy successor to the Homeworld classics, although it can lack a spark of its own.
Brimming with confidence and overflowing with unlockables, the latest Lego Marvel game is a content-rich, breezily enjoyable placeholder.
An off-road racer with an incredible amount of content, S�bastien Loeb Rally Evo is let down by its own dreariness.
This War of Mine remains a striking, if limited, exploration of civilian wartime survival. Compelling and gritty, it needles deep.
Big, beautiful and rewarding, Jon Blow's enigmatic puzzle epic is virtuoso game design - and only a fraction too clever for its own good.
Punishing and beautifully crafted, Darkest Dungeon is cruelty at its classiest.
Oxenfree isn't a horror game with a message, but it's still got lots to say.
Stunningly presented and very well written, Aviary Attorney is a light hearted court drama with great panache and terrible puns.
Abstruse, demanding and silly, Resident Evil Zero has nevertheless stood time's test, thanks to its ingenious design and exquisite style.
Witty and melancholic, Gone Home is a triumphant exploration of a beautifully textured family space.
Released on consoles at last, this elegantly grim adventure at the end of the world is that rare contradiction: a nostalgic original.
An understandably personal work, That Dragon, Cancer's sentimental excesses place a minor dent in a powerful, brave game.
Hardware: Rivals is a throwback to a different era of multiplayer, though it's a little too modest to properly pull it off.
Having dispensed with the rock-star posturing, Harmonix's return to its abstract rhythm action roots is a textured, vibrant triumph.
Ubisoft handles the hunt for Jack the Ripper with surprising care, but familiar gameplay.
Codemasters goes hardcore with this no-frills, punishing off-road sim, resulting in its best game in years.
Dariusburst: Chronicle Saviours is a successful cinematic rebirth of a classic, though it can be an acquired taste.
Music festivals offers an alluring theme for a management sim, but BigFest's simplistic approach fails to make the most of its metaphor.
Free aiming and ricochet shots bring wild life to this exquisite turn-based blaster.