LunarSpecter
Tetris: The Grand Master 4 Absolute Eye Review
Tetris: The Grand Master 4 Absolute Eye is not interested in making you comfortable. It is interested in making you better. Every mistake is punished, every success is earned, and every level climbed feels like a genuine achievement.
Hamstory Review
Hamstory takes the familiar frustration of precision platforming and wraps it in warmth, kindness, and genuine heart, creating an adventure where every setback feels like part of the story rather than a punishment.
Mashina Review
Mashina feels like somebody built an entire video game out of cardboard, clay, tape, and pure affection. Beneath its cosy digging loop lies one of the warmest and most genuinely human indie adventures of the year.
Shadow the Ronin: The Revenge to the Samurai Review
Shadow the Ronin: The Revenge to the Samurai aims to tell a bloody tale of vengeance in feudal Japan, but beneath its dramatic premise lies a painfully dated action game that struggles to justify the journey.
Gobliiins Collection Review
Gobliiins Collection feels like opening a dusty treasure chest from the early days of PC gaming and finding pure creative chaos inside. Strange, funny and wonderfully unpredictable, this anthology preserves one of adventure gaming’s most eccentric legacies with genuine care.
SILVERPINE CREEK Review
Silverpine Creek weaponises silence. It turns creaking floors into threats, breathing into a liability, and your own living room into part of the horror. This is survival horror built on vulnerability, where panic itself can become the enemy.
Kyra The Hunter Review
Kyra The Hunter delivers a compact but confident action experience built on sharp combat, stylized exploration, and thoughtful accessibility design. It may be brief, but its focus and clarity give it a quiet strength that lingers beyond its runtime.
Emoji Battlefield – Summer Vacation Review
A breezy, chaotic roguelike FPS that thrives on personality and controlled nonsense, even if its novelty eventually shows its limits.
Arcade Archives 2 ARKANOID Review
A faithful restoration of a brick-breaking classic that proves simple ideas can still feel sharp, timeless and endlessly replayable.
Axe Cop Review
Axe Cop plays like someone handed a box of crayons to a classic RPG and told it to stop making sense. What follows is messy, loud, occasionally brilliant, and often hilarious in a way that feels impossible to replicate on purpose.


















