Tag: Single-player
Lost Little Things Review
A return to the childhood home becomes a descent into memory itself, where forgotten objects reshape reality and every creaking floorboard feels like it remembers you. Lost Little Things is a slow, unsettling psychological horror experience that finds its power not in spectacle, but in the quiet weight of what we leave behind.
Kids On Site – Hard Hat Edition Review
For many of us, the sight of a construction site wasn't just a neighbourhood nuisance; it was a front-row seat to a world of...
Arcade Archives 2 ARKANOID Review
A faithful restoration of a brick-breaking classic that proves simple ideas can still feel sharp, timeless and endlessly replayable.
Console Archives MAGMAX Review
A faithful restoration of a 1986 mecha shooter that may be simple by modern standards, but still carries a surprising sense of growth, clarity and mechanical charm.
In Trusted Hands Review
A sharp narrative simulation about privacy, pressure, and the cost of curiosity, In Trusted Hands turns phone repair into a moral balancing act where every unlocked secret carries consequences far beyond the screen.
Akuma Rise Review
A familiar yet satisfying JRPG that leans on classic turn-based combat and flexible party building, Akuma Rise delivers a steady demon realm adventure defined more by comfort and clarity than innovation.
Little Things Review
A tightly focused precision platformer that turns gravity itself into a puzzle, The Little Things builds its challenge from repetition, rhythm, and razor-sharp control. It is minimal in presentation but demanding in execution, rewarding patience with the quiet satisfaction of mastery while pushing players through a steep, sometimes punishing difficulty curve.
Froggy Hates Snow Review
Froggy Hates Snow turns a simple idea, digging through frozen ground, into something tense, strategic, and unexpectedly heartfelt, where every tunnel carved feels like a small rebellion against the cold.
WILL: Follow The Light Review
WILL: Follow The Light is at its best when silence takes over, letting frozen seas, distant storms, and the lonely creak of a yacht say more than words ever could.
Versebound Review
Versebound turns Finnish mythology into a bruising, mournful struggle for survival where every battle feels earned and every victory echoes like an ancient poem carried through the cold.













