Sometimes a game teaches you a valuable lesson about life, gives another insight into diverging viewpoints, or can even teach you a new skill.
Publishers Devolver are always bringing interesting stuff from the indy gaming scene to a wider audience — good one, Devolver, love your work — and on this occasion it’s Possessor(s).
Midnight Murder Club is a first-person shooter stealth party game, where you and five others are armed with a revolver, knife and flashlight in a dark mansion.
I was never really a Battlefield player, despite having owned various series entries.
It’s probably fair to say that 2020’s Ghost of Tsushima snuck up on the gaming world a little bit with just how darned good it was.
Here is a question this grizzled veteran of sports gaming never thought he would have to ask.
Is Hideo Kojima the world’s last rock-star game developer?
TRON: Catalyst is a top down action adventure game where you play as Exo, a program in the TRON setting’s computer world, whose last delivery for the night explodes.
It’s rare that I feel a looming sense of apathy when I go to open a game.
Horror fans are in for a treat if they draw back the curtains on indy RPG Look Outside, writes Michael Robertson.
Comparisons can be odious things.
There are definitely a lot of bugs to iron out here.
You know, it’s just occurred to me that the only Donkey Kong game I’ve actually played has been the original arcade version.
Indiana Jones and the Great Circle arrives the year after Harrison Ford’s decent but unspectacular final bow as Indiana Jones was met with a bit of a collective cultural shrug in theatres.
Call it Map Legend Fatigue Syndrome, perhaps.