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All the confusing yet irresistible energy of early-noughties double-A gaming, marred by awful writing and a core gimmick that doesn't ignite.
While a fine piece of craft and a sumptuous reworking of the setting, EA Motive's Dead Space remake sheds a little of the 2008 game's enchantment.
An intimite, mindful story of journalling what matters hits a few small bumps in the road.
Forspoken takes it time to get over a wobbly start, but there's something worthwhile here amongst the noise.
Sluggish pacing and stripped-back character interactions dull the charm, but there are still scares to be found
An interesting reworking of the traditional Pokémon gameplay for an open-world setting brought low by its lifeless environments and graphics
Slick puzzle design finds itself at odds with the creativity of organising that A Little to the Left wants to evoke.
An escape from alien invasion, with beautiful art direction.
Despite the joys offered, Sonic Frontiers is a hot mess of a reinvention that can't commit to its new direction.
Football Manager is still the best sim of its kind, but FM23's serious lack of major improvements shows an annual release schedule taking its toll.
This year's Modern Warfare 2 has some good moments, some beautiful cinematics and some typically moreish multiplayer - but it's a cowardly retconning of the original's story.
This is a slight muddle of a game, but it has its pleasures.
In Scorn, a game of wonderfully horrible atmosphere and smart, hands-off puzzling is undermined by some dodgy checkpoints and wonky combat.
An aimless-feeling revamp of 2016's best multiplayer game, slightly coarsened by free-to-play grinding.
Part adventure game, part construction simulator, Lego Bricktales lays strong foundations for a truer type of Lego experience.
Dome Keeper merges digging and base defence but struggles to make either a success in their own right.
Imperfect, unkind, and rough round the edges, Session captures more of real skateboarding than almost any game that has come before.
FIFA 23, like so many FIFAs before it, sums up the best and worst of football culture - a joyeous game in the vice-like grip of profiteers.
An exhilarating, fluid, incredibly broken mage-'em-up set in tortured procedural worlds.
Knockabout sugary fun for four players.