GameSpot's Reviews
Halfway is an emotional tale of mystery and survival that occasionally lacks the courage of its own convictions.
Great exploration and combat make Rogue Legacy a game you will want to play (and die in) over and over again. [OpenCritic note: Britton Peele seperately reviewed the PlayStation (8) and PC (8.5) versions. Their scores have been averaged.]
Magic 2015 gives you fewer reasons to love a fantastic game.
The Last of Us Remastered is a spruced-up edition of one of the most well-crafted action adventure games of the last console generation.
Emotional storytelling and challenging gameplay can't wholly save Gods Will Be Watching from some of its bad design choices.
The most fragile hero of side-scrolling platforming returns in a beautiful reimagining of Abe's Oddysee.
A cheesy puzzler with plenty of charm, MouseCraft favors style over substance.
Unrest is an unconventional but erratic adventure game that inspires empathy even as it undercuts its own message.
Clementine is no longer a spectator in Amid the Ruins, the action-packed latest episode in season two of The Walking Dead.
A host of glitches keep Wayward Manor feeling anything but welcoming.
The excellent Divinity: Original Sin isn't a look into the history of role-playing games, but instead a look into their future.
It tries to add something new with its story mode, but Infinity Runner isn't much more than a rote Temple Run clone.
Sniper Elite III can be a chore, but its gleeful X-ray kills help make up for its deficiencies.
Smooth and exciting aerial and tank action is at the heart of War Thunder, a big and broad multiplayer excursion back to World War II.
Cry Wolf brings The Wolf Among Us to an uneven conclusion, but still packs the occasional emotional punch.
Strong writing isn't enough to establish the apocalyptic stakes at play in Richard & Alice.
Xenonauts is an excellent strategy game that casts you as Earth's only line of defense against an apparently omnipresent extraterrestrial threat.
Offering no more than meets the eye, Transformers: Rise of the Dark Spark is just a shallow, frustrating, and incoherent third-person shooter.
Shovel Knight recalls, but doesn't rely on, many greats from gaming's past, but lacks the inventive spark that could have elevated it to classic territory.
Killzone: Shadow Fall Intercept's mishmash of co-op ideas doesn't make for the most compelling of experiences.