VGChartz's Reviews
Provides closure for a title 27 years in the making and represents yet another stout shooter on Switch.
Worry not that Konami shows no interest in authorizing a new Castlevania game, for Inti Creates has picked up the slack.
Iron Man VR successfully grabs the Marvel video game baton from Spider-Man and Ultimate Alliance 3 and can hopefully pass it along to Marvel's Avengers later this year.
Clubhouse Games excels in both the quantity and quality of its diverse, enjoyable set of recognizable games.
Ambition winds up elevating and harming The Last of Us Part II with respect to its expanded gameplay and uneven narrative.
This may end up as one of R. L. Stine's greatest nightmares yet—for all the wrong reasons.
It's great news that Ultracore can now see the light of day, after 25 years in the dark.
A highly entertaining Metroidvania-styled platformer with fantastically witty writing and amusing dialogue.
Redux offers plenty to like for shooter fans, particularly if they gravitate toward series like R-Type.
A fun and charming new take on the franchise that many fans should enjoy.
M2 has done justice to Taito's extraordinary shooting series with Darius Cozmic Collection Arcade.
Darius Cozmic Collection Console is a nice add-on for Darius fans who've already invested in its Arcade counterpart. However, it's not an ideal substitution.
If this is the swansong for COWCAT and Diabolical Mind on Vita, then it's a very good way to go out.
Death end re;Quest 2 represents another promising franchise spiralling down the drain at Compile Heart.
Sometimes the try, die, retry system can grind your gears, but more often than not you’ll be enjoying the myriad scenarios in which you stealth kill your way to another victory.
Xenoblade is one of the landmark titles in the genre over the past decade, and the Definitive Edition improves on it across the board.
A nice add-on for franchise completionists but largely superfluous for more casual fans, especially when weighed against the strength and value of vanilla MK11.
A release worthy of wearing the remastered label.
It's a relatively short game with a modest amount of trial and error, but its mechanics, level designs, and quality-of-life features make it a must-play for shoot-em-up fans.
Due to its opaque nature and punishing action, Resolutiion will appeal mostly to fans of dangerous souls-like combat and abstruse exploration in the vein of the original NES Zelda.