RPG Fan's Reviews
NieR: Automata improves on its predecessor in almost every way. It's thoughtful, inventive, subversive, and an absolute joy to play.
A new direction for the franchise that is as brilliantly successful as it is bold, Breath of the Wild raises the bar for a series that has already set a phenomenally high standard.
An enjoyable experience with a disappointing final act. There's still plenty of potential left, if Season 2 ever comes along.
An enjoyable experience with a disappointing final act. There's still plenty of potential left, if Season 2 ever comes along.
Mass Effect: Andromeda presents plenty of great ideas, but these tend to be either aped too closely from its predecessors or buried under issues that are surmountable yet frustrating all the same.
Lieve Oma is a charming little game about how our relatives shape us.
Horizon Zero Dawn isn't without its issues, but it's a thoroughly enjoyable game that belongs in every PS4 owner's library.
Torment is a niche title for those who want to left click between pages of a book.
If you're a JRPG fan, you should be playing this game.
A decent game, but it doesn't do enough to stand out in the oversaturated "me too" retro-game crowd.
The clumsiest Atelier title since Rorona, Atelier Firis lacks the heart, soul, and polish of its predecessors.
To all the faildaughters and failsons out there who've ever felt like their lives were hecked up forever, Night in the Woods has got your back.
20 years later, Trio of Towns fits nicely into the mold that the series has made for itself. Failure to break out of it in the next entry, though, could be a great misstep for this farming franchise.
NieR: Automata takes what was great about NieR and adds some fantastic action gameplay on top of it.
A dense and impenetrable creature-management simulation that relishes in gut-punching the player every time they make progress.
Dark Souls II: Scholar of the First Sin offers only minor tweaks to serious gameplay issues of the original game. Nonetheless, it still remains a wholly enjoyable online experience, just don't expect much from the singleplayer experience.
Although brief, the game's flow meanders as sluggishly as its central characters.
Nioh nails the combat and sense of danger, but things get repetitive fast and I'm hungry for new challenges.
Tales of Berseria still has that same old Tales of feel, but it brings some much needed revitalisation to the series.
Not a bad game, but impossible to recommend to anybody.