VideoGamer
VideoGamer's Reviews
Rare Replay is a lovely collection that I can't help but feel could have been even lovelier.
Despite plenty of issues, A Knight to Remember isn't a terrible start to the adventure, just a rather unnecessarily tedious one.
N++ delivers consistently excellent bursts of platforming devilishness, but it's not enough to keep me interested for the long haul.
Tembo could have been great, but sadly it's a game in which you're made to crawl over the line instead of gloriously smash through it.
Awesome Level Max includes some excellent action that is worth the price tag if you're itching for some more Trials Fusion, but sadly the Awesome Adventure isn't nearly as expansive or interesting.
Rory McIlroy PGA Tour continues the trend of well-known sports franchises making disappointing, threadbare debuts on new consoles.
Codemasters continues to mix thrilling driving with a distinct lack of ways to race, resulting in a disappointing new-gen debut for Formula One.
An enjoyable, compulsively playable mix of driving and football.
Sophisticated, engaging, and utterly unique.
God creates dinosaurs. God destroys dinosaurs. God creates man. Man destroys God. Man creates video game featuring dinosaurs.
Excellent occasionally, good in parts and downright dull in others, Yoshi's Woolly World is a disappointment.
Batman: Arkham Knight is the best Batman game ever made and a classic in its own right.
I enjoyed my time battling foes alongside wizard friends new and old, but Magicka 2 takes more effort than most games, and it's tiring.
By turns brilliant and frustrating, a Nintendo classic and a missed opportunity.
Lifeless Planet delivers a brief adventure just about worth taking, but it doesn't offer enough technically or say enough thematically, despite the odd flourish on both counts.
Toren's weak central mechanics, repetitive action, and overall bugginess are mitigated somewhat by its engaging mood and direction.
I don't know what a chocolate and monkey milkshake would taste like, but it somehow sums up Not a Hero perfectly.
The Witcher 3 is vast, intriguing, and enthralling.
Shorter, more tonally cohesive, and outright better than its predecessor.
It's been a long road to release, but Project Cars delivers.