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Newcomers will find a lot to enjoy, but there's little reason to return if a dive into Hell is what you were looking forward to.
A pleasant return to old-fashioned tomb raiding.
Geometry Wars 3 makes big changes, but retains the excellent core gameplay and delivers another addictive blaster.
Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker isn't the most taxing puzzle game in the world, but it's well-paced and enjoyable all the same.
WWE 2K15 presents a visual step up over old-gen versions, but regresses in most other areas of the game, ending up being largely disappointing.
Halo: The Master Chief Collection is an immense package, but a table falls when a leg is cut off.
A beautiful, intelligent remaster that is worth double-dipping for.
LBP3 reaches new highs for the series by delivering some of the best levels and gameplay yet seen, but also disappoints with a fleeting campaign.
Why feeling largely familiar, Omega Ruby still offers a solid game of Pokémon with addictive online trading functionality to keep players obsessively catching 'em all.
Evolution rather than revolution, and better for it, Far Cry 4 is the best the series has to offer.
LEGO Batman 3 starts slow and then gets a lot better, and then overwhelms with so much content it's hard to be disappointed.
A worthy addition to the Dragon Age series, but it takes some time to prove it.
Unity may have the intention of being Assassin's Creed's next-gen reinvention, but it's remarkably faithful to its roots.
A superb football game held back by a frustrating flaw in its passing game, this is the best football title on new-gen. But it could have been the best of all-time.
Mixing futuristic tech with established fundamentals, Sledgehammer has created the first truly impressive Call of Duty in years.
Lords presents an enticing world, but staggered combat and numerous bugs leave it in the shadows of its rivals.
Sunset Overdrive has some excellent ideas, but its triumphs are sadly suffocated beneath ultra-repetitive mission design and unsatisfying enemy encounters.
Shadow Warrior is old-school in all the right ways, bringing the original into the modern era while leaving some of its less desirable aspects in the past where they belong.
Not just 'Civ 5 in space', but excellent series additions are offset by problems old and new.
Activision's toys-to-life series is still wonderfully entertaining, but Trap Team's relentless encouragement to buy new toys can be draining on your enthusiasm – and your wallet.