GameSpot's Reviews
Another year of subtle improvements and gameplay additions make MLB The Show 16 a must-buy for baseball fans.
Enter the Gungeon is a challenging roguelike with awesome ideas that often contradict one another.
Ratchet & Clank is a veritable power fantasy fueled by rockets and carried by specialty gadgets.
Michonne’s second solo outing finally gets down to business.
Hack and slash your way through the brilliantly realized horror-fantasy world of Grim Dawn, an instant classic in the action RPG genre.
The stunning Hyper Light Drifter is a masterful mix of exploration and combat.
Slain is a gorgeous spectacle that's a total drag to play.
Into the Stars delivers intense Roguelite space strategy, but reveals all of its cards too soon.
Dark Souls 3 is a harrowing trek through a dark and gorgeous world, and despite a few missteps, is well worth the challenge.
Quantum Break looks slick, but bouts of ineffective gameplay and its mixed-media construction make this a hit-and-miss experience.
Much of Black Desert Online is a convoluted mess, but few games let you create a virtual life this absorbing.
Dirt Rally's arrival on consoles lets more people join in Codemasters' celebration of this brutal motorsport. [OpenCritic note: Richard Wakeling separately reviewed the PC and PS4 versions.]
Oculus Rift enhances the familiar platforming in Lucky's Tale, but the VR adventure fails to leave a lasting impression.
Adr1ft is a gorgeous game with a moving personal story, but its systems clash against one another, creating tedium and boredom throughout.
Trackmania Turbo delivers thrills online and off thanks to high speed, crazy tracks, and a unique time trial focus.
The studio behind imaginative indie hits Machinarium and Botanicula debuts its most ambitious game yet: a beautiful yet simplistic point-and-click adventure.
Mercenaries is a disappointing expansion to last year's Galactic Civilizations III that limits your freedom on the battlefield.
Republique comes to PS4 as a complete package, and the game is all the better for it.
Moon Hunters has a good story to tell, but grinds it to dust in the process.
Assessed solely as a Zelda game, Hyrule Warriors probably isn’t good enough to lure in non-Dynasty Warriors fans, but it is passable enough to offer Musou lovers something different to play between their usual battles for dynastic superiority.