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Before We Leave is a great, relaxed simulation, but feels like it may be missing a few things
it is obvious the love and attention that went into creating Streets of Rage 4, a game made first and foremost for fans, but made accessible and engaging enough for casual players to enjoy. Streets of Rage 4 is a must play, particularly towards fans who may have been on the fence.
SpellPunk VR's magic fizzles out from barely-working controls and limited engagement to keep players coming back after the first time.
Final Fantasy VII Remake does the impossible, somehow allowing me to relive one of the biggest gaming moments of my childhood as if it were new.
In trying to combine shoot-em-ups and brick breakers, Sky Racket misses the point of both genres.
Bleeding Edge's many interesting ideas and fantastic characters are overpowered by a frustrating combo-laden gameplay loop.
Resident Evil 3 joins its forbearer as another top notch remake. I'm happy to see what Capcom has been doing with the series and wonder where they'll take it next.
Genre-bending and hauntingly mesmerizing, Half-Life Alyx brings the series as it should have always been experienced while doing the impossible: surpassing Half Life 2.
If you want to be a troublemaking, superpowered criminal with little resistance, Saints Row IV: Re-Elected is unparalleled in what it gives you.
Ultimately, Doom Eternal is a violent and visceral tribute to single-player shooters, one that rewards skilled players and punishes those who may think they already know everything there is to know about the first-person shooter genre.
Persona 5 Royal takes an already stellar game and reinvigorates it with content that is sure to please both fans of the original and those playing the game for the first time.
Animal Crossing: New Horizons takes everything good about Animal Crossing, and improves it ten-fold.
You might come to Double Dragon & Kunio-kun: Retro Brawler Bundle for Double Dragon and River City Ransom, but you'll likely stay for the sheer variety of mayhem and play experiences that it has to offer.
Fine to fill time or bring existing pokemon fans to other styles of games, but not for much more.
Ori and the Will of the Wisps maintains its brilliance while introducing an incredible new combat system.
Nioh 2 takes a solid foundation and improves upon it in nearly every way with more weapons, more skills, and a whole new approach to Guardian Spirits.
Ruthlessly charming to a degree that renders minor quibbles negligible [insert alligator joke]
Alongside essentially being a new IP here in the West, Granblue Fantasy Versus bring a lot of new ideas with it which for the most part, work out in the end.
At the end of the game's update cycle, Street Fighter V: Champion Edition proves to be a fitting conclusion to a rock solid fighting game.
Rune Factory 4 Special feels like a game where you always have something to do, offering so many different systems to play around with