GameSpot's Reviews
The Toy Box is back and better than ever in Disney Infinity 2.0, and it's still a great way to have a shared gameplay experience with the favorite little child in your life (even if that's you).
Roundabout's story is short-lived, but it's jam-packed with humor and crazy, quirky action.
An unlikely pairing of Dynasty Warriors and The Legend Of Zelda yields greatly satisfying results.
Its core combat is sensational, but Lichdom: Battlemage never evolves a proper game around it.
Hatoful Boyfriend is a unique experience, one that goes well beyond its bonkers concept and intentionally strange visual presentation. I was expecting to simply giggle at a nonsensical game in which I tried to woo feathered men, and what I received instead was wholly and wonderfully unexpected. Anyone with a taste for the unusual would do well to enjoy the company of these fetching fowl.
Destiny's essentials are there, and they're great--but the game surrounding them is cold and shallow.
Theatrhythm Final Fantasy: Curtain Call is a massive dose of nostalgia for Final Fantasy fans, and even though it's very similar to its predecessor, there are plenty of reasons to continue your journey down memory lane.
The Sims 4 is beautiful and charming, but its constricted structure makes it disappointingly limited.
New generation graphics and marginal gameplay improvements clash with a lot of missing features in NHL 15.
Dead Rising 3 combines bland gameplay and colorful stereotypes into one unfortunate adventure.
Dance Central Spotlight is a lean but thoroughly enjoyably sequel that shifts its focus toward the core dancing experience.
Velocity balances platforming and shoot-em-ups as well as modern aesthetics and retro play to create a nearly perfect action experience
The Last Tinker's colorful art style isn't enough to overcome its tired mechanics and dreadful framerate.
Infamous: First Light benefits from Second Son's excellent fundamentals. Its missions and storytelling, however, lack spark.
Madden 15 is a beautiful football game, but its biggest achievement stems from much improved defensive mechanics that make both sides of the ball fun to play.
A brutal showdown and zombies on ice mark the final, oddly slow-paced, episode of season two of The Walking Dead.
Firefall's shooter/MMORPG hybrid combines genres to produce mediocrity.
Golf returns to the PC with The Golf Club, a rigorous simulation that falls just short of the green.
It doesn't move the genre forward in any way, but Shadowgate is a wonderful return to the early days of adventuring.
Even if you can tolerate the inane stripping mechanic, Akiba's Trip does little with its battle system or narrative to warrant your time.