GameSpot's Reviews
Arkham Knight is another slick and enjoyable Batman adventure, though what it brings to the series' table is not always for the best.
Massive Chalice can create hilarious moments of eugenics disasters, but other elements leave a lot to be desired.
Kholat's poor attempts to creep and confound you fail to capitalize on its terrific premise.
Lots of colorful Blizzard characters cross paths in the sensational Heroes of the Storm.
Shadowrun Chronicles is a bad use of the Shadowrun license, and a bad tactical RPG.
Carmageddon: Reincarnation is a tired and clunky reboot of a better game suited for a different time.
Awkward platformer Sym speaks to a vulnerable issue, but it's difficult to figure out what exactly it's trying to say.
Neon Struct is a retro stealth experience that is a bit too retro for its own good.
Van Helsing III is fun, but its reliance on old assets and disappointing brevity make this action role-playing game less than incredible.
Splatoon is surprising because it bucks trends that have held back shooters for years, opening the genre up to all comers, casual and hardcore alike.
Hatred isn't fun, interesting, or titillating enough to command your time or attention.
Magic combat and co-op play remain brilliant in Magicka 2, but the sadistic solo experience along with a few bugs and design problems cause some of this spell to fizzle.
Magnetic: Cage Closed's reliance on imprecise platforming and nondescript storytelling makes the game's prison setting an unintended and accurate metaphor.
Game of Thrones' fourth episode prioritizes verbal sparring over the physical kind, slowing down the action and packing in new twists to tension's detriment.
Sunset is a creative, powerful story of personal, political, and social conflict.
Schrodinger's Cat is smarter than the average platformer, but still a pretty average platformer.
The third episode of Life is Strange marks the series' high point, with poignant emotional moments and a twist that turns the narrative on its head.
Technobabylon combines tricky puzzles with fantastic world-building and storytelling.
It's light on features, but Swords and Soldiers II is successful at boiling an RTS down to its entertaining essentials.
The Old Blood's madcap attitude shines throughout its campaign, but the game fumbles when it strays from its Nazi-filled levels.