Tag: Rating 4/5
Formula Legends – Legacy Edition Review
Formula Legends: Legacy Edition captures the romance of motorsport's past without becoming trapped by nostalgia. Blending approachable racing with surprising strategic depth, it delivers a celebration of Formula racing history that feels both welcoming and rewarding.
EA SPORTS FC 26: The World’s Game Edition Review
For over a decade, Electronic Arts has held a position most publishers can only dream of. Following the split from FIFA in 2023, many...
GOALS Review
GOALS arrives with bold ambitions and a fearless vision of competitive football. While it still has rough edges to smooth out, its focus on pure skill, responsive gameplay, and a living football ecosystem makes it one of the most intriguing challengers the genre has seen in years.
eFootball Kick-Off! Review
eFootball Kick-Off! strips away the complexity, live service clutter, and endless menu navigation that have come to define many modern football games, delivering a focused experience built around the simple joy of playing football.
River City Saga: Journey to the West Review
River City Saga: Journey to the West is a fast-paced adventure packed with humour, satisfying combat, and enough build variety to keep players coming back for "just one more run." It may sacrifice some of the exploration that defined previous spin-offs, but what it loses in scope it gains in momentum.
Time Crisis Review
Thirty years later, Time Crisis remains a masterclass in arcade game design. The visuals may belong to another era, but the frantic duck-and-cover action still delivers an adrenaline rush that many modern shooters struggle to match.
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.
Snowlike Review
Snowlike takes the familiar bullet heaven formula and sends it hurtling down an endless mountain at breakneck speed. Equal parts snowboarding game, roguelike, and absurd comedy, it delivers a surprisingly fresh spin on a crowded genre while never losing sight of what makes these games so addictive in the first place.
Dungeons Of The Deep VR Review
Dungeons Of The Deep VR feels like a forgotten dungeon crawler unearthed from another era and carefully rebuilt for virtual reality. It may not chase modern trends, but for players willing to embrace its old-school design, there is a surprisingly rich adventure waiting beneath the mountain.
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.













