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Your inner child who was willing to suffer through the hardships of NES platformers will thank you for buying this game.
The Banner Saga 3 is a journey worth taking -- and a worthy concluding chapter to a winding, fantastic tale.
Despite it's solid core mechanics and efforts to be faithful to its source material, Pirates of the Enchiridion is bogged down by poor pacing and various technical difficulties.
Take the fight to the enemy in this roguelike, bullet-hell FPS from Grip Digital.
A game that would be considered niche last gen, Octopath Traveler brings back classic JRPG gaming with style and class.
Sonic Mania Plus makes a fantastic game even better and brings new characters for old fans to enjoy.
Shining Resonance: Refrain's focus on music and dragons is a great concept, but it comes across as a bit choppy in practice.
If you're a die-hard arcade enthusiast, this is the only Street Fighter Collection you'll ever need.
Mario Tennis Aces is the best Mario Tennis game in over a decade, despite a few hard-to-forgive problems.
Gladius is exactly the change of pace that the Warhammer 40,000 franchise needed!
A lack of focus clearly hurts the game overall. There is plenty to do to be sure, and a wide range of race types, but The Crew 2 seems like its trying to hard to be an unrealistic arcade racing entry, a hardcore street race simulation, or a loot-drop MMO, and the fun kind of gets lost in the mix.
A short but - most importantly - free episode taster for the upcoming Life is Strange 2, the adventures of Captain Spirit appear that they'll indeed, be awesome.
Rainbow Skies tries hard to be an epic turn-based RPG, but it thoroughly disappoints in every possible way.
Unravel Two comes up slightly short in comparison to the greatest in the genre, but it nonetheless provides a memorable and serene co-op experience.
The refined gameplay, additional content, and cross-play support makes Minecraft: Bedrock Edition a worthy substitute for the Java Edition.
Octo Expansion offers fans of Splatoon 2's single-player mode an entirely new playground full of 80+ missions, an engaging (and dark) story, and a finale that is better than it has any right to be.
Hyrule Warriors: Definitive Edition combines the best of both versions of the game, providing ridiculous amounts of content that any Zelda fan would swoon over.
The downside to the simplification of the story and action is that while this game is enormously fun to play with a kid or if you're a younger player, it's a bit too simple for an adult audience. Since it's clearly intended for a younger audience, this is not necessarily a flaw, but it's definitely something to consider if you like your games with more depth. That said, it's so much fun to run around destroying things, and the humor is so slapstick and fun, that LEGO The Incredibles will charm whoever plays it — whether you're familiar with either franchise or not.
Just because you can make a tycoon game about Jurassic Park doesn't mean you should.
This is more a one and done story, but its a story that's well worth experiencing first hand, even if it is a little rough around the edges.