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The cyberpunk genre is in the midst of a resurgence lately, and you'd be better off looking just about anywhere else for your genre fix.
This flashy remake of Abe's sequel is gorgeous to look at, but it rarely captures the excitement or feeling of the Oddworld forebears.
Balan Wonderworld tries to be an homage to nostalgic platformers from the PS2 era, but it forgets to be a good game in the process.
Story of Seasons: Pioneers of Olive Town is a surprisingly dull and lifeless farm-sim that's a shadow of its storied self.
For RBI Baseball 21 to launch in such a poor state with MLB The Show going multiplatform is like seeing your favorite team sit on a pile of cash as a division rival forms an all-star team.
XIII makes a return as a remake of the 2003 original. It's a game that should have stayed in the past where it belonged.
Marvel's Avengers is the most broken gaming experience in 2020, and even if it was polished, it would be severely flawed.
Summer in Mara looks lovely right away, but the shine wears off quickly amid a long list of issues, both fixable and sadly, not fixable.
Sin Slayers aims to meld two genres together into one tasty soup but instead creates a nasty black goop.
A beautiful world begging to be explored falls victim to unclear direction and clunky controls making for a disaster instead of a delight.
We were promised a unique, "award"-winning storytelling experience. Instead, we received a convoluted mess that isn't sure what game it wants to be.
Through an extremely short, inconsistent, and annoying slog of mediocrity, Bubsy shows us why he probably should have stayed down for the count.
Tattletail is basically what you get when you cross Five Nights at Freddy’s theming, Slender’s gameplay, and an 80s VHS aesthetic with complete and utter tedium.
A cumbersome, blood-soaked mess that does nothing new and little good.
I wanted this game to succeed. I really did.
A game best played on mute.
Whilst currently the only way to gain silver keys is by playing the game, the fact you can buy perks (which improve your character) with a considerable amount of silver keys, and the fact that certain monsters are just upgrades of others, makes me worry for the future of the game. It might be free to play, but it looks like it may be pay-to-win.
Shooting for the stars only gets you so far.
The Dark Pictures Anthology: The Devil in Me is scary, but not for the reasons you might think.
New Tales from the Borderlands is a vapid vision of its remarkable predecessor, bogged down by exasperating choices from beginning to end.