The Digital Fix
The Digital Fix's Reviews
Faster, smoother, and bursting at the seams with content, Berseria delivers a much needed kick to the series.
BOOR is a darkly beautiful game with plenty of interesting puzzles to keep you engaged, but the lack of narrative progression lets it down.
Poor art direction and music stop The Sun and Moon from being a great puzzle game.
A fun, colourful throwback to yesteryear whose quirky charm and addictive gameplay just about outweigh its issues.
Highly polished and visually stunning, Three can't come fast enough...
Disappointing design choices makes Alwa's Awakening difficult to recommend.
Despite a promising plot and an eerie atmosphere, Uncanny Valley fails to make the most out of its survival horror inspirations
The Digital Fix polish their firearms and stroll into an apocalyptic landscape to review Adult Swim's Xbone homage to gaming's golden age: Rise & Shine.
It's a truly wonderful trick that Yakuza 0 plays, and rather than work out how it does it, just sit back and let this videogaming alchemy entertain you.
A game which offers a lot of depth for player choice, but poor execution makes all the effort feel pointless. Earth's Dawn tries to make up for its lack of content with too much repetitive gameplay.
A flawed experiment, Steep is revolutionary in the most laid-back fashion and full of those charming Ubisoft follies.
When compared with its inspiration, LIMBO, it falls drastically which makes recommending it difficult - especially given its current, buggy, state.
While not as genre-bending as perhaps one might expect a video game portrayed as a interactive theatre show to be, Knee Deep does provide an entertaining, if rather silly, distraction while it lasts.
I, for one, welcome our new parasitic overlords, as saving the human race has never been so relaxing.
A potentially beautiful game, crippled by an awful camera, archaic controls, and bizarre, frustrating gameplay.
The tower defence-style twist to RTS is fun but it gets old, fast, much like the rest of Siegecraft Commander.
Short but oh-so-sweetly sick, Resident Evil 7 rewrites the series formula to nerve-shredding success, with PSVR integration only adding to the immersion.
While the gameplay is fun the whole experience is overly repetitive. Add in a confusing setting and a complete tonal shift from the anime and you get a game that does not live up to expectations.
Overall Don Bradman ‘17 is an improvement over its predecessor, especially visually.
HoPiKo is a cheap and cheerful game and while if you play too much of it you may end up with an RSI, nailing that level was worth it, right?