Tag: PlayStation 5 Review
BAHAMUT AND THE WAQWAQ TREE Review
A meditative underwater journey through myth and memory, Bahamut and the Waqwaq Tree trades combat for calm and turns restoration into something quietly powerful.
Abuga Warp Zone Review
A sharp, fast platformer wrapped in playful mystery, Abuga Warp Zone turns precision movement into a puzzle of timing, trust, and consequence.
Little Nightmares VR: Altered Echoes Review
Little Nightmares VR: Altered Echoes transforms childhood fear into something tactile and immediate, delivering one of the most unsettling virtual reality horror experiences in years.
ScooterFlow Review
ScooterFlow finds its identity in motion itself, turning scootering into a grounded physics playground where style, rhythm, and patience matter more than any traditional scoring system.
NTE: Neverness to Everness Review
NTE: Neverness to Everness is the kind of open-world RPG that tries to be a city you live in rather than a map you clear. It is messy in places, overwhelming in others, but undeniably alive in a way few modern games even attempt.
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.
Pinball FX – Williams Pinball Premium Collection Review
Pinball FX - Williams Pinball Premium Collection is not trying to reinvent pinball. It is trying to preserve it, refine it, and remind you why these tables still matter decades after the first ball ever bounced across their glass. What you get is less a reinvention and more a carefully restored archive of arcade history that still knows how to bite back.
Wax Heads Review
Wax Heads feels like flipping through a record crate and finding something you did not know you needed. It is warm, a little scrappy, and full of personality, the kind of game that understands music is not just sound but memory, identity, and sometimes a bit of chaos.
For The King II: Age of Omus Edition Review
For The King II: Age of Omus Edition feels less like a simple content bundle and more like a second wind for an already ambitious tabletop-inspired roguelite. It is a package built for players who have already bled through Fahrul once and are ready to do it again with sharper teeth and bigger consequences.
MOTORSLICE Review
MOTORSLICE feels like a dream you are not quite sure you are controlling. You move fast, faster than you should, carving through metal and momentum in equal measure, chasing a rhythm that sometimes slips through your fingers just as you think you have it.













