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An exciting, kinetic single-screen multiplayer with excellent level design, but little to reward the solo player.
Great in places, but never quite lives up to its potential. A competent sequel let down by inconsistency.
A miserable blend of flawed game mechanics that's a giant leap backwards from its predecessor.
Resident Evil 4 is still a masterful shooter nine years later. Occasional slowdown caused by the locked 60 fps framerate hampers an otherwise great port.
Masochistic stat-chasers will find much to enjoy, but Blackguards' varied combat is no substitute for a fully-formed RPG.
Technical shortcomings aside, Dragonfall's story rocks; a well-spent $15 for any RPG fan.
Strider is a liberating, free-form action platformer studded with frustrating callbacks to an arcade era better left behind.
The Walking Dead's signature moral dilemmas are more nuanced than ever in a plot-heavy second episode.
A fun, polished, handcrafted RPG attached to a genuinely funny 15-hour-long South Park episode.
Stylish, succinct and spiritual, Year Walk coins its own genre: the fright of passage.
Infuriatingly difficult, but perfectly constructed. Ikaruga is the PC's best bullet-hell shooter.
The most exciting multiplayer shooter in recent years, held back from greatness by its questionable staying power.
Rambling plot aside, Burial at Sea, Episode 2 is an entertaining stealth-lite shooter with a likeable lead.
Like the best of Vlambeer's cannon, a simple concept executed beautifully. Limited enemy and level design, though.
A single-screen platform brawler that's about as good as the genre has ever been—in versus or wave-survival mode.
The story is lacking, but great environments, a new class, and more freedom—partially from the free patch—make for a better Diablo III.
It starts promising and gets better in the final act, but the bulk of Betrayer's journey is let down by inconsistent quality, repeat enemies, and investigative drudgery.
The worst gaming goat since that one in Broken Sword. This is a dumb, limited novelty game that's not worth the asking price.
An exceptional collection of puzzles bound by narrative which gets a little ahead of itself.
A great comeback from episode two, A Crooked Mile amplifies the drama—though sometimes in the wrong ways—and confronts Bigby with hard choices and proper detective work.