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Skylanders: SuperChargers ups the ante with interactive vehicles, multiplayer action, and endless fun.
Super Mario Maker gives rare insight into the world of game development, and could prove essential to a new generation of digital creators.
Disney takes a big step forward in Infinity 3.0, and the result is a world-building experience that does indeed feel infinite in its scope.
Developer Rocksteady reinvigorates its Arkham series formula with fresh gameplay features and an expansive open world in Batman: Arkham Knight.
The Witcher 3 is enormously ambitious, and a monumental game that engulfed us from start to finish.
Splatoon is a beautiful new twist on the shooting genre, but lacks team chat and other modern norms.
A solid shooter standing atop fan service and nostalgia
A challenging game with a colossal chip on its shoulder
Mortal Kombat X is bloody well done
Bloodborne is a significant evolution of the Souls series, but it comes with some new problems too.
Battlefield Hardline is a two-pronged success, with a killer cops-and-robbers story backed by a speedy take on competitive play.
Resident Evil Revelations 2 is a paint-by-the-numbers exercise in survival horror lacking in bite strength
Kirby and the Rainbow Curse is a weird and beautiful game, but it's an odd fit for the Wii U.
Dead or Alive 5: Last Round amounts to the definitive version of a game released back in 2012, which is both a good and a bad thing.
Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate's accessibility and rapid early progression make it a deeply appealing Nintendo 3DS experience.
The Order: 1886 is a dull, plodding experience that's beautiful to behold but spends too little time giving players a reason to stick around.
In emphasizing level progression, skill growth, and unlockable characters, Turtle Rock smothers Evolve's premise.
Dying Light can be great, but it doesn't understand its own strengths.
Grim Fandango invites you to find meaning in just one life. It just so happens that you're already dead when it starts.
The Saints go straight to hell, both literally and metaphorically, in Saints Row IV standalone expansion, Gat Out of Hell.