COGconnected
HomepageCOGconnected's Reviews
While the Nintendo Switch has some absolutely wonderful games releasing in its first year, Golf Story is right up there with the best of them
_________________________ “In its current state, Inmates plays more like a promising proof of concept than a finished product.
Darkestville Castle healthily solicits curiosity and delivers clicks in the form of satisfying punchlines.
The combat system from the first game is back and still just as great.
The second Battlefield 1 expansion, In the Name of the Tsar, is definitely a worthy pick-up for Battlefield 1 players.
Evil Genome is a metroidvania that gets the most important part right, and left me wanting in every other category.
Amazingly, with all of its roots firmly planted in the past, Cuphead raises the bar for indie games and platformers alike.
Visually, Forza Motorsport 7 is an incredible looking game. Newcomers will be blown away while series veterans should feel right at home.
Morphite is a game with exactly as much depth and complexity as you want there to be.
Pylon: Rogue excels because it knows what it is: a rogue-like RPG about skill, precision, and stacking a crazy number of skills.
Simply put, Mario and Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions is a fantastic RPG for the 3DS.
________________________ “Every single level and every time you start the game you're faced with a ridiculous two-minute load time
Battle Chasers' presentation carves a space in your head with plans to establish a permanent residence.
The Pact moves the series' story forward nicely, confronting players with interesting, serious moral dilemmas.
If you've been looking for a good atmospheric adventure puzzler keep Xing: The Land Beyond in mind.
If you've been looking for a good atmospheric adventure puzzler keep Xing: The Land Beyond in mind.
While I understand their aim for making this an arcade game, I find myself disheartened as it had the potential to be more with only a few tweaks.
The sound design is easily one of the most redeeming qualities for an experience already enticing to the platform veteran.
The Solus Project does what it sets out to do — immerse you in a dangerous environment for a dozen or so hours and task you with surviving long enough to experience the story. While I wish there was a bit more to the plot, and while the controls frustrated me, it's a fairly solid exploration and survival game. The VR component makes it worth investing some time in.
The entire game is based around exploration, puzzles, and atmosphere. It lives and dies on those three things.