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A deep tactical wargame with strong fundamentals supporting a broadly successful campaign system.
Frostpunk is a stressful, stylish, and addictive survival management game filled with incredibly difficult choices.
A beautiful medieval adventure that uses real history and interesting characters to tell a compelling story.
Impressive ogre battles and challenging, hectic missions, but I just wish there was a bit more to Extinction.
The death timer can feel like a gimmick sometimes, but it gives this fun, charming adventure a compelling edge.
A big, beautiful, chaotic canvas of freeform destruction, Far Cry 5 continues the series' best traditions.
Messy, varied and inadvertently hilarious: A Way Out is an unusual but uneven tandem ride.
A superb water park for four friends to splash around in, but progression is sluggish and there are too few surprises beneath the waves.
Octahedron gets more mileage than you'd think out of the ability to summon platforms beneath your feet.
Without Evermore, Ni No Kuni 2 would have been good. Because of it, it's one of the best JRPGs on PC.
Northgard is a surprising, elegant RTS that's laden with a very dull story.
Surviving Mars is a lot of hard work, but managing a burgeoning colony never stops being compelling.
KSP's sandbox gets bigger by focusing on what makes it a great PC game: flexibility, freedom, and random explosions.
Offers a fantastic road trip, even if it's not a particularly in-depth RPG.
Vermintide 2's combat and level design are so feverishly fun that I'll put up with its bad matchmaking and RPG progression if it means chopping more ratmen in half.
An excellent beat-em-up with tons of wit and great combat, Full Metal Furies belongs on any couch co-op playlist.
Joyful and surprising, even when you're cracking open an anthropomorphised egg.
A well-formed slice of noir mystery, beautifully presented. Some writing issues aside, A Case of Distrust is well worth your time.
Even stranger than its premise and scarier than it looks, The Station is a short ride to a great ending.
There are beautiful and tragic scenes, songs, and passages to find in WTWTLW's journey, but they're spread far too thin.