Outer Wilds is the most innovative take on the puzzle adventure game to date. The game's story and gameplay are beautifully intertwined, and yet there is no correct order in which to play this game, there is nothing stopping you from just walking to the end of the game instantly if only you knew the way.

This game brings out every emotion you have in the greatest possible way, fear, anger, sadness, awe, satisfaction. Please take my word and try this game for yourself because there's not much more I can say about it.

Sonic Unleashed is half one of the best Sonic games ever made and half one of the worst. The game has fast and exhilirating Day Stages which introduce "boost gameplay", which focus on Sonic running through fast paced 3D stages with the option of a boost or turbo. Naturally, the counterpart of these are Night Stages, which are played as Sonic's "werehog" form in a beat em up style game.

The Night stages can go fuck themselves, and they ruin the entire experience for me, they are designed in every sense to waste the player's time and stop them from beating the game too quickly. This game is still worth a try if you are a Sonic fan, because the Day stages and the appealing graphics, animation, story, and soundtrack will likely rub off on you anyway.

This is by far the definitive Simpsons Game, it's story, gameplay, and world design encompass what made The Simpsons great in the 90s despite being made after the Golden Age of The Simpsons came to an end.

If that doesn't convince you, you can kick Marge Simpson in the face and get away with it.

I would give the game a 10/10 but the driving controls suck ass and make many of the levels a pain in the ass.

This game is constantly praised to death for it's political storytelling, but it's true, this game has a pretty good story. Aside from that it's an above average cover shooter, suffering from many of the common flaws, but still introducing interesting ideas where it can, along with it's unique and beautiful semi-realistic, semi-surreal setting. This game could have been better, but I respect it's humility.

This game was always one of my favourites. Taking the modern military shooter fad to it's extremes, Modern Warfare 2 delivers an exciting Hollywood style campaign, and a damn good multiplayer mode.

The game's create-a-class system encourages different playstyles and gives you something to do while waiting for a game. The guns sound and look powerful and aggressive, and feel good to shoot. The maps are as well designed for gameplay as they are for looking at.

The campaign could definitely use less linearity, and the multiplayer could have had better netcode. Otherwise, this game is pretty badass and will always have a place in my heart.

Devil May Cry V is a game that ties up the narrative of the DMC series with the untapped potential of DMC4's combat system. It's plot is emotional and nostalgic, continuing Nero's story while reenacting DMC3 in a way. The graphics are some of the best of the generation while still performing smoothly on both PC and console alike.

With the puzzles removed, the game is slightly faster paced than previous entries, focusing more on combat. The combat system is once again really good, expanding on both Nero and Dante's abilities with the new weapons and devil breakers in interesting ways, with strong enemy designs allowing for the awesome player interaction you expect from Devil May Cry.

Unfortunately, the third playable character, V, isn't very good and ruins the flow of the campaign. The game also lacks a turbo mode and Legendary Dark Knight.

Just like Halo 2 before it, Halo 3 is another masterpiece from Bungie. Halo 3 has another brilliant campaign, albeit a shorter one, and another massively improved multiplayer mode.

Halo 3 experiments with items and weapons not seen in previous Halo games, which makes fighting both AI and human opponents even more tactical and satisfying. Again, new maps and new gameplay modes bring a lot of variety.

Halo 3 does lack some things that Halo 2 had, but everything Halo 2 lacks, Halo 3 brings, making this the ultimate sendoff for the Master Chief and Cortana.

Halo 2 is everything a sequel should be, it has more of everything that made Halo 1 great. The campaign is awesome with it's improved level design and new enemy types and vehicles. The characters and the story is bigger and better, particularly the Arbiter and his story arc. The multiplayer is a heap of fun, far better than the original, with better maps and new game modes. Even the glitches and mistakes in this game are a joy to exploit.

Halo 2 never disappoints.

Destiny was a massive disappointment, the game has strengths in certain areas, with it's controls having the same great feel as Halo, and the visual design and music also being up to standard. What went wrong?

It's just a really short and piss poor MMO that promised to be something new and exciting.

Halo Combat Evolved was a big deal at the time, the game's AI, large environments, and more were unseen on consoles at the time. The game still comes off very well today, with an excellent multiplayer mode, and the odd classic campaign level here and there. You can have a lot of fun with friends in Halo, with the coop mode and the PvP multiplayer.

However, I take no pleasure in admitting that the majority of the single player has not aged well, a lot of levels are copy pasted, unpolished, and boring.

Crash Bandicoot is the first video game I ever played, so it should come as no surprise that it's still one of my favourites.

The simple controls, cleverly made mechanics and level design, and the revolutionary graphics have wowed me for as long as I can remember, and I always enjoy replaying this classic to kill time.

Sonic Adventure is a very enjoyable game, despite it's inconsistent and dodgy nature. The game showcases some of the best Sonic 3D gameplay to date, it's aesthetically pleasing, and it has a rather nice narrative. But one must be careful to avoid glitches and jank while playing it, and not all the characters were created equal.

The Last of Us is an ambitious title that sadly falls short of it's lofty goals. It's plot is dramatic but tenuous, it's gameplay is tense at some moments and boring at others. Thankfully the PS4 remaster is a major improvement over the original version with it's 60fps performance and photo mode.

This game is still above average, but it leaves one wanting to be sure.

Sonic Generations is just OK. Taking on the torch from Sonic Unleashed, Sonic Generations continues the boost gameplay style, switching the Werehog combat mode for traditional 2D Sonic stages.

The game is painfully short, and it's no better than Unleashed in any particular area, wasting a massive oppurtunity to make something great.

One of the last great games of the era of GTA Clones, Sleeping Dogs is wonderfully presented with it's depiction of Hong Kong and Traditional Chinese Culture.

The story is quite cool, presenting the player with a choice between allying with the police or triad gangs, forced to hide their true intentions from the other.