GameSpot's Reviews
Zanki Zero's strange blend of roguelike exploration, survival gameplay, and sci-fi character drama is truly unique, but lousy combat and a rough beginning stretch keep it from greatness.
As a spiritual successor to Burnout 3: Takedown, Dangerous Driving bottles up some of that Criterion magic, but these moments are fleeting and too many issues pile up to make it little more than a pretender.
Tropico 6 builds on strong foundations, honing detail and offering expansive new sandboxes in which to craft your ideal island nation.
Fantastic world design, exciting combat, and a seemingly unending sense of meaningful progression make it easy to get completely rapt by The Division 2.
PS4's MLB The Show 19 continues the series' upward trajectory with significant improvements to fielding and plenty of enjoyable new modes.
The World Next Door has fairly stereotypical characters, but it delivers some enjoyably frantic puzzle battles in the second half of its campaign.
With Take Us Back, Telltale's Walking Dead meets its true ending with the grace it deserves.
Operencia transports you somewhere far, far away, and once you get there, you'll probably want to stay a while.
Delightful and imaginative, Yoshi's Crafted World rewards your curiosity with the little things.
From Software takes its unique brand of challenging gameplay to the stealth-action genre, and delivers something unforgettable.
Baba is You is a clever, challenging indie puzzle game that often confounds, though not always in satisfying ways.
Ethereal's frustrating technical issues are alleviated by the satisfyingly challenge of its puzzles.
Hypnospace Outlaw is a time capsule of the late '90s internet that has a message for today.
This third-person stealth action game is better left alone.
Objects in Space comes in the guise of a mid-'90s adventure game, but it is an sharp callback with plenty of its own magic to bring to the table.
DMC5 proves the series can still be brilliant and imaginative without compromising its longest-held traditions.
ToeJam & Earl: Back in the Groove is an endearing throwback whose charms and frustrations both feel unmistakably like products of 1991.
The beautiful visuals, fun battle arenas, and easy-to-grasp fighting gameplay of Dead or Alive 6 make for a brawler that packs a punch.
Ape Out prioritizes style over substance, but it's weird and interesting enough to justify a play.
One of the best modern twin-stick shooters is now (slightly) better than ever.