Tag: Rating 4/5
Heart of the Forest Review
A slow-burning psychological horror that roots its terror in trauma and fractured trust, Heart of the Forest delivers an emotionally gripping survival story where the true enemy isn’t just in the woods—it’s within.
Mario Tennis Fever Review
A colorful and chaotic anniversary celebration, Mario Tennis Fever serves up the series’ biggest roster and flashy new mechanics—though its lightweight Adventure Mode and balance quirks keep it from a perfect match point.
Disciples: Domination Review
A brooding and tactically refined continuation of the Disciples saga, Domination delivers strategic depth, meaningful political choices, and a haunting atmosphere—proving that in Nevendaar, power is never freely given.
Cash Cleaner Simulator Review
A strangely soothing crime-lab simulator that turns money laundering into a meditative management loop—Cash Cleaner Simulator is equal parts absurd, relaxing, and unexpectedly addictive.
Cargo Runner – Mars Review
A tense, progression-driven Martian delivery sim that blends rugged vehicle traversal with sharp on-foot combat—Cargo Runner – Mars turns logistics into survival, and survival into strategy.
Centipede Gun Review
A smart, synergy-driven roguelite that turns creature-building into chaotic art—Centipede Gun thrives on experimentation and the thrill of watching your monstrous creation spiral into unstoppable destruction.
Corner Kitchen Fast Food Simulator Review
A calm, satisfying restaurant sim that trades chaos for control—letting you build your burger empire at your own pace, one perfectly managed shift at a time.
World’s End Club Review
A colorful, heartfelt adventure that trades cruelty for compassion, proving that even at the world’s end, friendship can still be the strongest plot twist.
Balls vs. Tombs Review
A clever elemental action-survival game where fusing powers and reclaiming souls turns a haunted graveyard into a strategic playground of destruction and redemption.
Dream Peak Review
A beautifully restrained adventure that replaces violence with curiosity, and challenge with compassion—proof that finding your way home can be its own kind of triumph.













