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Vlambeer's latest pocket of panicky delight is an intense arcade roguelike that rivals Spelunky and The Binding of Isaac.
Fast Racing Neo offers a welcome and competent substitute for the long-absent F-Zero that's light on extras, but commanding on the track.
Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam Bros is wholesome, warm, but occasionally wearisome.
A bombastically enjoyable action game with serious performance issues gets spread too thinly over a vast map.
Majestic, vibrant, almost peerlessly handsome, Xenoblade Chronicles X is Japanese RPG-making at its most ambitious and determined.
Ivory Tower's ode to the open road is an underrated gem, but this fiddly expansion still can't advance its MMO aspirations.
Too gentle and sweet to warrant the online bile, this board game spin-off is nevertheless a very limited and repetitive stopgap.
Generous, artful and brutally hard, The Old Hunters is the perfect send-off for a modern masterpiece.
Battlefront's multiplayer-centric action is stylish and refreshingly simple, although it can feel more stunted than streamlined.
Rough round the edges and clunky in parts, Hard West's refreshing take on turn-based strategy is still worth saddling up for.
Telltale's well-worn adventure formula finds a perfect fit in the politicking of Westeros.
The Mario Tennis you know and love, only substantially less of it than usual. Still fun, but such slim pickings leave a sour taste.
Despite a couple of neat additions, Football Manager 2016 is an iterative release that's sadly short on big new ideas.
Glimpses of Yuji Naka's outmoded genius can be seen in Rodea's barren skies, but a paucity and dissonance of ideas make this a failure.
Where Treyarch's single-player struggles, the deftly tuned multiplayer soars, delivering a Call of Duty that's rich with options.
Julian Gollop's devious turn-based classic receives a worthy update.
A vast and frequently brilliant return to Bethesda's atomic sandbox, but constant technical issues are a frustration.
The new Lara Croft works out some kinks in a second act that, while slick and enjoyable, doesn't resolve Tomb Raider's identity crisis.
More than just a pleasant surprise, this expansion puts into focus all that's good about DriveClub.
After last year's disaster, 2K's series bounces back with the best wrestling game in years.