Tag: Switch Review
Mythmatch Review
Mythmatch takes familiar puzzle mechanics and reshapes them into something that feels genuinely original. Blending Greek mythology, thoughtful town building and a heartfelt story about belonging, Nana Moon has created a charming indie adventure that proves there is still plenty of life left in the match puzzle genre.
Death Run Review
A neon-drenched precision platformer framed as a deadly televised game show, Death Run throws you into laser-lined obstacle courses where one mistake means instant failure and instant restart.
The Legend Of Fireball: Deluxe Edition Review
The Legend of Fireball – Deluxe Edition knows exactly what it wants to be. It doesn't pretend to offer an epic fantasy adventure or a deeply strategic action game. Instead, it embraces the simple pleasure of watching increasingly ridiculous things explode, and sometimes that's exactly the kind of gaming comfort food you need.
Garfield Kart Road 67 – 2 in 1 Review
Garfield may be famous for avoiding Mondays, but he certainly knows how to handle a racing line. Garfield Kart Road 67: 2 in 1 combines two entertaining arcade racers into one surprisingly polished package that delivers plenty of laughs, satisfying drifting and enough chaotic multiplayer moments to keep the whole family coming back for one more race.
Agatha Christie’s Deadly Voyages – 2 in 1 Review
Agatha Christie's Deadly Voyages is far more than a collection of two detective adventures. It is a thoughtful celebration of mystery storytelling that respects the original novels while confidently steering them in bold new directions, proving that Hercule Poirot still has plenty of unforgettable cases left to solve.
Scholar Adventure: Mystery of Silence Review
Scholar Adventure: Mystery of Silence doesn't try to modernise the point and click adventure by abandoning its roots. Instead, it embraces everything that made the genre special, pairing thoughtful puzzles with haunting pixel art and a quietly compelling mystery that proves silence can often speak louder than words.
Kenshō Review
Kenshō isn't interested in testing your reflexes or overwhelming you with impossible puzzles. Instead, it invites you to slow down, breathe and lose yourself in a beautiful world where every solved puzzle gently restores nature. It is a peaceful, thoughtfully designed experience that lingers in the mind long after the final door has opened.
Tenshi no Uta:The Angel’s Verse Collection Review
Some role playing games become legends because they changed the industry. Others quietly disappear despite doing something truly special. Tenshi no Uta: The Angel's Verse COLLECTION finally gives two forgotten PC Engine masterpieces the audience they have deserved for more than thirty years, and their emotional stories still resonate today.
Reposition Defense Review
Reposition Defense takes one of gaming's most familiar genres and asks a wonderfully simple question: what if your towers couldn't move, but you could? The answer is a frantic blend of strategy and real time decision making that keeps you constantly thinking, constantly adapting and rarely standing still.
Rhythm Paradise Groove Review
Rhythm games have always occupied a unique niche in gaming. While many genres chase cinematic storytelling, sprawling open worlds and increasingly complex mechanics, rhythm...













