GameSpot's Reviews
It's Dynasty Warriors as you've seen it before, except you can be a talking cat with a gun.
The unlikely collision of Mario and Rabbid franchises is delightfully charming, and features a deeply satisfying turn-based tactics system underneath its colorful skin.
Codemasters sweeps the podium with the best Formula One game ever made.
Distrust is a roguelike isometric survival game inspired by The Thing where hunger and sleepiness are as frightening as the aliens hunting you.
Episode 3 of Telltale's Guardians of the Galaxy series has well-developed relationships and conflict but suffers from similar problems as its predecessors.
A meditative game about exploring and gathering that offers great beauty but not much else.
Yakuza Kiwami picks up where Yakuza Zero left off, upholding its dramatic storytelling, offbeat humor, and flashy yet frustrating combat.
Undertale exceeds expectations, when it isn't busy subverting them.
An intensely personal story mode, graphical upgrades, and frequent updates make Madden NFL 18 one of the series' best games in recent memory.
A dynamic duo from Uncharted's rich cast of colorful characters proves there's life after Nathan Drake.
The Pillars of the Earth tells a gripping story of personal and political drama, but its slow pace may not make it a good fit for everyone.
Bugs and a rough story weaken what is, at its core, a great survival game.
Obnoxious attitude, poor mission design, and technical bugs make Agents of Mayhem chaotic and repetitive.
Sonic Mania is both an evolution of the series' iconic formula and the best Sonic game ever made.
PS4's Matterfall is a visually stunning yet uninspiring hybrid of Housemarque's past successes.
This mind-bending cyberpunk masterpiece is a grim yet beautiful descent into the hell of being human.
Nidhogg 2 is more bloated and less refined than its predecessor, but it remains an engrossing and hilarious multiplayer game.
Traditional MOBA gameplay with an impressive cast of characters and a great setting help Gigantic breathe fresh air into an old genre.
One sign of any worthwhile team-based shooter is a level of accessibility where everyone feels they can contribute no matter their play style, and Lawbreakers succeeds in this manner. [OpenCritic note: Miguel Concepcion separately reviewed the PC (8) and PS4 (7) versions. Their scores have been averaged.]
Capcom collects the Blue Bomber's post-NES career into another handy, albeit somewhat lackluster, Mega Man Legacy Collection.