Tag: PlayStation 4 Review
Santa’s Christmas Gift Quest Review
A cosy, family-friendly Christmas adventure that blends light puzzles and exploration into a cheerful seasonal quest.
Toad Slide Review
Toad Slide turns playful physics and joyful momentum into a polished puzzle adventure, delivering satisfying movement, clever design, and boundless charm.
Dungeons and Ducklings Review
Dungeons and Ducklings blends charming presentation with smart, puzzle-driven dungeon design, offering a relaxed yet engaging adventure that rewards planning and thoughtful exploration over fast reflexes.
Pixicharm Collection 8 Review
Pixicharm Collection 8 delivers a colourful selection of bite-sized, retro-inspired challenges, offering accessible, score-driven fun built around fast learning and repeatable mastery.
Temari Trials: Dojo’s Test Review
Temari Trials: Dojo’s Test is a focused, mastery-driven action game that turns short trials into meaningful lessons, rewarding precision, timing, and steady improvement through repetition rather than spectacle.
Labubu Battle Royale Review
A colourful, fast-paced battle royale that trades realism for arcade-style chaos, delivering accessible multiplayer action packed with personality and playful competition.
Too Many Santas! Review
A frantic, festive arcade game that embraces chaos and comedy, throwing players into fast-paced battles against far too many Santas at once.
Juufuutei Raden’s Guide for Pixel Museum Review
This isn’t a game for players seeking adrenaline—but for those who appreciate the artistry and history behind gaming’s most foundational aesthetic, it’s a standout release and a love letter worth exploring.
Pad Quad Review
Pad Quad is a lean, demanding platformer that values smart design over spectacle, offering rewarding challenges for players who enjoy precision and teamwork.
Blood: Refreshed Supply Review
Blood: Refreshed Supply is more than a remaster. It is a resurrection of one of the nastiest, smartest, and most atmospheric shooters of the 1990s. Caleb’s war against the Cabal still feels vicious nearly three decades later, proving that great horror never really stays buried.












