IGN's Reviews
Imagination takes a backseat in Revelations 2, but great co-op and an intriguing story pumps blood through its veins.
Gearbox gives Homeworld the respect it deserves in this impressive refitting of Relic's classic
Hand of Fate delivers a fun, atypical RPG experience that lets you act out the scenarios of a trading card game.
Though a stylish adventure, The Order: 1886 emphasizes its cinematic polish at the crippling cost of gameplay freedom.
Sunless Sea gives you a wonderful world to explore that's packed with memorable written vignettes and danger.
Kirby and the Rainbow Curse is a brisk, gorgeous platformer that has no qualms with taking off the training wheels.
The Escapists makes breaking out of prison as hard as nails, yet soft as taffy.
Total War: Attila is an adept refinement of Rome 2, with a great, harrowing campaign that sets it apart.
It's a shame that more significant improvements weren't made to Fahrenheit: Indigo Prophecy Remastered, since playing both sides of a murder conspiracy is still such an interesting concept that's not often done right. However, the frantic button prompts, still-stupid stealth, and newly-introduced glitches make this Remaster way too unrefined.
Tactically deep, and bursting with character, Evolve offers a level of nuance rarely found in multiplayer shooters.
Just when you think the fight is over in Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate, the next challenger steps in and ups the level of competition for another satisfying round of combat and loot. Very few games can hook me in for 100 hours, but this installment adds enough new creatures, weapons, locations, and fighting moves to expand and reinvigorate my lust for the hunt.
Grow Home's charming personality, feel-good physics, and satisfying controls make for a beautiful climbing adventure.
Gravity Ghost is a poignant and weird space adventure that's definitely more about experience than the challenge.
It looks like a game worthy of Zeus, but weak controls keep Apotheon out of the action-platformer pantheon.
The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask 3D proves that interesting game design and strong world-building never get old. Even 15 years later, it still delivers charming characters, tense resource management, and a world rife with personality. Despite some cumbersome menus and a single drag of a dungeon, Majora's Mask is a great adventure that (repeatedly) stands the test of time.
Raven's Cry would be a bad pirate game even if it weren't in such a buggy, unfinished (and unfinishable) state.
The Lost Lords neglects to advance the Forresters' story in meaningful ways as it introduces new characters.
Life is Strange starts out with a problematic first episode, but there's a lot of potential in this young-adult drama.
Supreme League of Patriots' clumsy political humor overpowers its sometimes-clever superhero-themed adventuring.
High-speed parkour and gruesome zombie massacres make Dying Light a blast, even if the story's just okay.