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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.
This throwback management sim's incredible building tools are let down by a limp campaign and a serious lack of depth.
An action strategy spinoff that disappoints both genres and misses Minecraft's magic.
The PlayStation classic remains out of reach on PC due to debilitating performance issues.
Power Chord's slick card-slinging combat is weighed down by a gaudy aesthetic and lack of variety.
Goat Simulator 3 neither excels at gif-able joke physics nor at being a structured singleplayer platformer.
Vampire: The Masquerade – Swansong offers an impressively flexible story, but that can't save it from its mediocre writing and scattershot game design.
Fighting bugs on Mars is a repetitive exercise only enlivened by the presence of your chatty pal Hurk.
Fans might get a kick out of designing their own character, but weak platforming stops Forces dead in its tracks.
Perception offers a decent set of horror stories, but exploring this house gets dull pretty quickly.
Persistent bugs, a convoluted interface, and incompetent colonists hold back a great premise.
An intriguing but often incoherent mystery that’s bogged down by long-winded dialogue and terrible puzzles.
After a promising start, Light's simplistic take on stealth quickly plateaus and then abruptly stops, falling well short of its potential.
LA Cops has some cool ideas, but the frustratingly shoddy execution works completely at odds with the experience the game is trying to create.
Neither a good LEGO game nor tribute to the movie—at best, The LEGO Movie Videogame is enough fun to be called a functioning promotional product.
A great looking game, but its beauty is only skin deep.
Beautiful, polished and painfully hollow. Ravenlok's bones are immaculate, but lack meat or connective tissue.
Shadow Warrior 3 buries a fun shooter so deep in muck that it's not worth dirtying your hands.
A smorgasbord of spectacular WW2 action scenes, none of which are excellent, and some of which are downright unfun.
Twin Mirror begins with an intriguing set-up but, disappointingly, ends up going nowhere.