It may not look it, but Yomawari: Night Alone is a terrifying, unsettling game, and its super-cute presentation is a big part of why that is.
Browsing: Game Review
Blue Revolver manages to take a genre as difficult as bullet hell shooters and make it accessible, without compromising on what makes such games great.
What it lacks in novelty, Pankapu makes up for in sheer platforming excellence. This is one of the finest modern examples of one of gaming’s oldest genres.
Dex’s good ideas quickly give way to a painfully generic cyberpunk romp with poor writing, shallow systems, and the most pedestrian brand of “edginess”
Shoot-’em-up and fighting mechanics come together beautifully in Bullet Ballet, but Touhou newcomers are in for a rough ride.
After a shaky debut last month, Batman: The Telltale Series has found its footing with an exceptional sophomore outing. This should have been the premiere.
Valley is a great first-person platformer with some clever ideas, but its real strength is the thrill of running, jumping, and soaring through the woods.
Ninja Smasher! is a fun, cute little retro-styled Metroidvania that doubles as a surprisingly insightful deconstruction of the genre.
For a game that many people will probably write off as a ‘pervy anime game’, Gal Gun: Double Peace is remarkably smart and subversive.
Realm of Shadows hints at an insightful take on the violence inherent in Batman, but it lacks the emotional weight of other Telltale premieres.