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Delightful deckbuilding that uses starship travel to build upon the Slay the Spire formula instead of merely imitating it. Outstanding.
Another witty Turnip Boy adventure chock-full of eccentric humour and enjoyable if not simple gameplay, I wish Snoozy Kazoo gave this root vegetable lad a little more room to commit his dastardly deeds.
With its emphasis on roleplay rather than combat and borrowings from Disco Elysium, Sovereign Syndicate feels like another step forward for the CRPG.
A palatable metroidvania with a mediocre story, my biggest frustration with The Lost Crown is how long it takes to get to the good stuff.
Against the Storm is a well-designed, charming, enthralling roguelike city builder.
Steep costs and microtransactions taint an otherwise dreamy life sim.
A rich, interesting, and honest experiment in history-as-game: If you're interested, play it.
More of a touch-up than a full-on renovation, but Sandbox mode is exciting.
Frontiers of Pandora's stunning presentation and fantastic world design are failed by atrocious technical issues.
Rogue Trader gets 40K's atmosphere right, but it's buggy and the rules are a mess.
A mismatched mix of genres grafted onto a moving, beautifully presented story.
Gangs of Sherwood shows initial promise with its creative setting and colourful combat but runs out of steam well before the end of its already brief running time.
Relaxing and brisk, but lacking in the substance needed to please genre fans and live up to the SteamWorld name.
A family-friendly adventure that captures the essence of the show, despite rough edges and a steep price.
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 is a disappointing anniversary for a series that really should take a break.
A supremely satisfying turn-based strategy spin-off, and one of Persona's best ever stories.
A satisfying, if conservative, return to the seminal roguelike's 2D roots.
The Last Faith is a beautiful but inconsistent rehash of older, better games.
Realms of Ruin is a clumsy RTS that's devoid of Warhammer's characteristic grim darkness.
It may be short, but it still packs a punch. Like a Dragon: Gaiden does little new, but its story is fascinating and heartbreaking in equal measure.