Tag: Exploration
Flight Simulator 2026 Review
Flight Simulator 2026 trades cockpit complexity for quick, accessible flying sessions, delivering an arcade leaning aviation experience that values momentum over realism. It never reaches the heights of premium simulators, but there is still something quietly enjoyable about chasing the horizon one checkpoint at a time.
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.
The Backrooms Review
The Backrooms turns internet folklore into a slow, unnerving descent through loneliness, uncertainty, and impossible spaces. It is not interested in jump scares every five seconds. Instead, it builds dread through silence, repetition, and the creeping feeling that reality itself has become untrustworthy.
Yoshi and the Mysterious Book Review
Yoshi and the Mysterious Book trades traditional platforming goals for curiosity, discovery, and playful experimentation. The result is one of Yoshi’s most charming adventures in years, blending gorgeous storybook presentation with a gentle sense of wonder that feels increasingly rare.
Tales of ARISE – Beyond the Dawn Premium Edition Review
Beyond the Dawn doesn’t chase bigger explosions; it chases better answers. In revisiting Dahna and Rena, Tales of Arise proves that the most heroic stories begin after the war is already won.
OOLO Review
OOLO feels like discovering a forgotten adventure game tucked away in an attic chest. Beneath its deceptively simple exterior lies a sprawling, quietly beautiful world built around curiosity, memory, and the joy of getting lost.
Beast of Reincarnation Preview
Beast of Reincarnation looks like the kind of game that wants to leave scars. Not through relentless difficulty or cheap tragedy, but through atmosphere, consequence, and the feeling of carrying a burden through a world already lost.
Assassin’s Creed Black Flag Resynced Preview
Thirteen years later, the wind still feels the same. The difference is that this time the sea fights back
Riven Review
There was a time when games felt like mysteries in the truest sense. Not mysteries solved with quest markers or highlighted clues, but worlds...
MYST Review
Some games feel tied to the era that created them. Others quietly step beyond time. Myst has always belonged to the second group. Back...













