GameSpot's Reviews
Fire Emblem Fates: Conquest is a punishing strategy RPG that marches forward and never looks back.
Colouring your world with intense shades of terror.
Dying Light's latest DLC supplements the full game's first-person parkour with customizable dirt buggies, drastically different environments, and a conspiracy-driven mystery.
A richly satisfying and wonderfully executed masterpiece.
Unravel's wonderful sights and sounds won't escape your own memory so soon. But assessed purely on gameplay, it's everything I tend to fear about indie projects; Beautiful, heartfelt, but like Yarny himself, not robust enough.
Though its plot doesn't fully pay off, Firewatch gives you a thorough, thoughtful insight into the formation of a meaningful relationship.
Devilian doesn't ask for much, and delivers just enough to pass the time.
Great level design can't save this boring multiplayer shooter.
Blade & Soul's phenomenal combat isn't enough to make up for its dated quests.
Lego Marvel's Avengers is a familiar ride through some well-worn Lego territory, but it's a charming and fun one nonetheless.
The Deadly Tower of Monsters contains countless odes to the golden age of sci-fi B-movies, but its gameplay is rote to the core.
Firaxis turn-based strategy sequel brings major improvements to the multilayered XCOM formula.
Hard West is a satisfyingly creepy mash-up of six-gun horror and tactical combat.
The war comes to consoles, but might have lost something along the way.
Bombshell is a disastrous mix of monotonous gameplay, annoying bugs, and atrocious writing.
Tharsis is a captivating but sadistic game of chance that puts your fate at the mercy of dice.
Gravity Rush's acrobatic heroine and fairytale metropolis feel at home in the PS4 remaster of the 2012 Vita hit.
In both structure and detail, The Witness is an original, difficult, and ultimately rewarding puzzle game.
Final Fantasy Explorers is a mashup of fanservice and Monster Hunter-like quests packed with deep character customization and genuinely fun multiplayer.
Tense combat, complex mechanics, and witty dialogue make this 2D turn-based strategy game an unexpected but worthwhile successor to 2013's SteamWorld Dig.