GameSpot's Reviews
Broken Age: Act II solves nearly all of the sins of the first half of the game while stumbling into a fair share of new ones.
Rhythm and roguelike sync up in a fun twist on a common concept.
The fantastic Tower of Guns combines the elegant dodging dance of bullet hell gameplay with a first-person shooter roguelike
State of Decay still hasn't become the game it wants to be.
In I Am Bread, both the joke and the game carry on far too long.
The fun and atmospheric Affordable Space Adventures lives up to its quirky title.
Harold is an infinite-runner platformer that's as pretty as it is punishing.
Dungeons 2 is a decent mashup of Dungeon Keeper and real-time strategy conventions, but oversimplification keeps it from being a keeper.
It is the most sumptuous and stealth-focused Assassin's Creed yet, but Chronicles: China doesn't assemble its pieces into a gratifying whole.
The horror of The Charnel House Trilogy makes a slight mark, but it's not a lasting one.
Slow Down, Bull is a friendly and occasionally frustrating game with plenty of good morals to share and an admirable goal.
Mortal Kombat X successfully continues the tradition of mixing a fighting game with gore-laced slapstick.
We Are Doomed delivers a satisfying-feeling twin stick shooter, but does so without any flair whatsoever.
Titan Souls stretches its simple structure to its breaking point, but before that time comes, it's an intriguing game and a fair but fun challenge.
With the move to current-gen consoles and a few new levels, horror hit Slender continues to offer up scares, but at the cost of its own mystique.
Paperbound is a thrilling multiplayer arena game, but too few game modes and lack of an online feature makes it only an occasional party favorite.
Dark Souls II comes to current gen with a vengeance.
Bastion remains as strong of a game as it was in 2011, but there's no need to buy this version if you already own it.
Etrian Mystery Dungeon is a punishing RPG that's difficult to put down thanks to a rich supply of loot and deep dungeons.
Minor refinements have noticeable impact on MLB 15: The Show, another rousing simulation of the national pastime.