Senua’s Saga: Hellblade II is a masterpiece of storytelling and character development. There is no other way to put it. It is the perfect example of d...[Read More]
Reflecting on Braid‘s significance, one has to play with time. The landscape of 2008 was vastly different for gaming, for most media. In this mo...[Read More]
Crow Country is not a game meant for anyone who would look at it and think, “ew.” The blocky, polygonal characters. The scanlines eerily m...[Read More]
It would be difficult to conceptualize SaGa Emerald Frontier to those, like me, who have no experience with the SaGa franchise. After the long, windin...[Read More]
Full disclosure, before this game arrived, I had no idea that Sand Land had been around so long. I didn’t know it was a manga, or it had a movie – I k...[Read More]
Tales of Kenzera: ZAU excels most at storytelling, enveloping players in a rich, emotional journey. Often, that may not be the sentiment one wishes to...[Read More]
Grandia, unfortunately, has not had the staying power of numerous other long-running JRPG series players likely recognize. Unlike Final Fantasy, Ys, D...[Read More]
Rarely do we play games on “Day One” in their most optimal state. Often when I review games in their pre-launch state, a degree of lenienc...[Read More]
The Intro Crawl: First off, I’m a Star Wars geek. There’s no getting around it, I was born in 1977, The Empire Strikes Back is my favorite movie, my L...[Read More]
In the early 1990s a young, anxious Ben Sheene had to quit out of Alone in the Dark. Ben had only been used to 8-bit games on his Nintendo Entertainme...[Read More]
Garden Life: A Cozy Simulator has no qualms readily identifying its goals to players. This is not an entry in the simulation genre meant to dissolve p...[Read More]
Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League unfortunately does not exist in a bubble. The daunting weight behind Rocksteady’s newest major release si...[Read More]