So endlessly entertaining and easy to pick up that it’s pretty much perfect for anyone who doesn’t actively hate computer games.

Read the ful review.

If you’re a big fan of the series it’s worth a playthrough, but if I were to make a ‘recommended reading’ of the series, this is the only 3D platformer that wouldn’t be on there.

Read the full review.

Unless you’re absolutely foaming at the mouth for something to submerge yourself in and forget that you’re not a pre-teen anymore, I really don’t think A Hat in Time is going to do much for you.

Read the full review.

I just don’t understand the appeal of regressing so far into an era of technology that’s objectively worse than what is available today without updating even a single thing to be consistent with today’s standards.

Read the full review.

Every aspect from music to visuals to the basic controls feel like placeholders for assets that will be added later.

Read the full review.

As long as you’re willing to put up with annoying writing and a not insignificant chunk of the game that just spins its wheels without going anywhere, the game is so fundamentally fun and engaging that I can recommend it to basically anyone who’s ever enjoyed a shooter.

Read the full review.

Money, items and ammunition is all so plentiful that it’s really just a test of how much time you’re willing to spend on something with movement speed this low and zombie AI this pitiful.

Read the full review.

Even if you’re not sick of this gimmick yet, the game is still a rudimentary platformer with barely functioning hitboxes and some of the worst, most irritating audio design in the world.

Read the full review.

Considering how much content Bloodlines offers and just the sheer amount of elbow grease that’s gone into making its world as authentic as possible, it’s an easy recommendation if you’re into this sort of thing and have the patience to properly sink your teeth in.

Read the full review.

Unless you bought a physical copy of this in the ‘90s and also have what I can only imagine to be a massive instruction manual explaining every little detail of what you’re supposed to do in this bizarre nightmare, and are somebody who doesn’t mind shockingly bad controls and visuals to boot, I wouldn’t recommend that you buy Litil Divil.

Read the full review.

Perfectly functional from a mechanical perspective, but also lacking creativity on such a grand scale that your eyes glaze over.

Read the full review.

Why anybody would want to spend time on something that so uncritically emulates an almost objectively worse period of video games is beyond me, and the game’s developers haven’t seemed to have come up with a good reason either.

Read the full review.

I love this janky game which is older than I am because it shows me what I want to see—what a Pokémon does when it’s doing something besides fighting another Pokémon.

Read the full review.

I won’t exactly warn you against trying it, but it’s not worth buying, and it’s not worth going out of your way for.

Read the full review.