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Cowboy Simulator Review

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Cowboy Simulator is a slow, grounded take on frontier life that focuses more on building and survival than spectacle. It can be uneven and occasionally repetitive, but it offers a steady, immersive rhythm that rewards patience and persistence.

Kristala Review

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Kristala is a fluid, character-driven action RPG that blends fast combat with a world that shifts alongside you. It doesn’t always feel predictable, but that unpredictability gives it a strange, personal edge. When it clicks, it feels less like playing a game and more like adapting to one.

PRAGMATA Review

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Two minds, one mission, and a broken world that only makes sense when you learn to think in parallel.

Throw Anything: Zombie Invaders Review

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Throw Anything: Zombie Invaders is pure, unfiltered chaos in a physics sandbox dressed as a zombie defence game. It is the kind of experience where a gold bar, a swivel chair and a printer become your last line of survival, and somehow that makes perfect sense within minutes of play.

Dead Stride Review

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Dead Stride is a straight-line sprint through the end of the world, built on panic, momentum, and the stubborn refusal to slow down long enough to grieve what’s been lost. It is messy, loud, and sometimes surprisingly human beneath the chaos.

Ground Zero Review

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A city frozen in ruin, where every corner hides something watching. Ground Zero doesn’t just revisit survival horror’s past, it drags it, kicking and screaming, into something more alien.

Ereban: Shadow Legacy Review

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Ereban: Shadow Legacy is a fast, fluid stealth platformer that thrives on momentum, letting you melt through darkness itself as both tool and escape. It’s at its best when you stop overthinking and simply move, chaining shadows and silence into something almost effortless.

Silent Evil Dead Horror Syndrome Review

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In the dark, you are not just surviving the experiments. You are becoming part of them.

I am Crazy Gorilla Review

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You are not trying to cause chaos—you are just reacting to a world that refuses to stand still.

Starfield Review

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Starfield finally feels like the game people imagined when Bethesda first revealed it. The galaxy is still rough around the edges, but somewhere between the lonely hum of a ship engine and the glow of a distant moon, it discovers a sense of wonder few RPGs can match.