✅75%

Toy Story 3 is one of my all-time favorite movies, and this adaptation was honestly a surprise. I remember when I was younger I couldn't get past the train section at the beginning. Oh how my skills have grown. The train section was the perfect way for this game to start off not only because that's how the movie opens, but because it has "high stakes" action for a kids/family game and introduces the mechanics really well. After that, it sends you in two directions: the story mode and toy box mode. Story mode was the toys retelling the events of Toy Story 3 and the before and after in bits and pieces, and I'd say it has a lot of memorable things. You get to play through the opening of Toy Story 2 which is a heck of a lot of fun and there's also the junkyard portion which brings all the mechanics and characters into a great penultimate mission. Sometimes it can feel like it's steering off track of the main movie mission with an extended portion of playing in Bonnie's room, but all of the missions are really fun and provide something unique. There isn't anything super notable in the gameplay, but what it does to respect the IP and provide a story mode that doesn't actually suck gives it points.

Then we get to Toy Box mode which made the inner Disney Infinity geek want to scream. I didn't know how much Infinity borrowed from Toy Box mode before I played this, and I truly see the inspiration. The music, sound effects, mechanics, set pieces, controls, and gameplay are all transferred from Toy Box mode to Disney Infinity. The race beacon is even the same! I'm not discrediting Infinity for borrowing too much, but it made me find more stuff in the Toy Box mode to do. The Toy Box mode is basically a Disney Infinity playset but if it was in Infinity I'd consider it one of the better ones. You get to hang out in Woody's Roundup's western town with a big mine, but there's so much else to do. You go through a haunted Sid's house, Lotso's enchated garden, and Zurg's space station. All of these use unique mechanics that are so fun. Woody with a laser gun? Ok! Woody riding a dragon? Awesome! The Toy Box has a lot of repetitive missions of just dressing up townspeople and buildings, but there are so many standouts in the Toy Box. The final main mission can feel a little underwhelming, but it gives you a fun cutscene to end it all off.

Toy Story 3 The Video Game isn't special by any means, but for inspiring Disney Infinity, respecting the Toy Story IP so well and giving great missions like the Buzz Lightyear video game and the Toy Box mode as a whole, it gives an incredible experience for Toy Story fans. Easily one of the better movie to game adaptations!

🏅94%

Super Mario Odyssey brings the mainline series back to the heights of World, 64, and Galaxy. While I found 3D World to be amazing, the games in the early 2010s before it were in kind of a lull. Galaxy 2 and 3D Land were fun, but the New Super Mario games kept coming out and never really did anything unique. Odyssey comes in here full force bringing an open-world 3D Mario game back. It never stops trying something new and creates a masterful experience.

You are first thrown into the Cap Kingdom which is the perfect introduction to the game. It has an eerie atmosphere creating mystery that begs multiple questions. What is this place? What is happening? What did Bowser do? What are these cap people? What is the Odyssey? It immediately lets you learn all of the basic controls in an open environment that is so much fun to go through. Then it takes it to a new level in every kingdom after that, with improvements in every kingdom. Some create a high energy environment like New Donk City and the Luncheon Kingdom, but you also have more desolate areas begging for more subtle exploration like the Cascade Kingdom and the opening segment of the Snow Kingdom. Whatever this game throws at you in the kingdoms is perfect and you are constantly anticipating what's next, while also enjoying what amazing things are in the kingdom you are in.

One of the major highlights in this game was New Donk City. There's so much to do in just this one kingdom. You can interact with city life, stuff taken for granted in the real world just feels so much fun like the jump rope game and city exploration. The energy here is unmatched with the boss fight, the festival, and the atmosphere created. The whole festival sequence where it goes 2D in a Donkey Kong tribute and you have Jump Up, Super Star! playing is one of the best parts of any game I've played. Odyssey knocks it out of the park at a visual and music standpoint, and just that one part is able to showcase that. The colors, the objects, everything looks amazing. But that also brings me to one small complaint. The whole game, whether it is the NPCs, objects, landscaping, it all has such an animated feel, yet I feel like some of the things in here look a little too realistic and takes away from that. I loved playing as the dinosaur in Cascade Kingdom, but it looked a bit too real taking away from the visual style in my opinion.

There is one other complaint, and that is the moons. Now you may be thinking, how did you love this game but hate the moons? I don't hate the moons. I loved them. I don't like the amount and placement. Some moons were way too easy and obvious. I feel like it takes away the reward when you find some of the harder ones. In Mario 64 and Galaxy, when you found a star it felt rewarding for the player, while here even when it was the same difficulty as a Mario 64 star, the feeling wasn't quite matched just from how easy some of the moons are. Getting multi-moons though, that had the same feeling.

Odyssey is one of Mario's best 3D entries. The gameplay is excellent here, and Galaxy is the only one that beats it. It doesn't match the gameplay of Galaxy, but does any game? Super Mario Odyssey nails everything it goes for and brings the Mario franchise back to the great heights it has reached. It took me almost 6 years to get around to this, but this first playthrough was excellent. I absolutely loved Super Mario Odyssey.

2010

Very atmospheric but honestly not much else. On one hand I love the simplicity of the game but on the other there isn't much to do and the gameplay becomes repetitive. The puzzles were more tedious than fun and it just gets old after a while. Luckily it was a shorter game. Good enough, but yeah not too big of a fan of Limbo. Hopefully I like Inside more.

2022

he's a cat, he's a stray, he's in a dystopia, he saves it, his friends leave him forever, never resolved, he protec, he attac, and most certainly, he's a cat

cars do go fast and it made me furious...crossroads

Such a surprising game. Gameloft is the studio behind that crappy Disney Magic Kingdom mobile game, so I had some concerns going into a Gameloft produced Disney life-sim. But honestly, after 20+ hours on it I have been having so much fun and playing non-stop. It's just so addicting. It grabs you and you don't want to leave. As a massive Disney fan, a game like this is everything I could ask for. While buggy, glitchy, and sometimes unresponsive controls, Dreamlight Valley supplies endless fun. A great alternative to Animal Crossing for Disney fans!

👍68%

Pac-Man World Re-Pac is honestly an underrated platformer! Reminding me of Crash Bandicoot, it's a short but fun game and while the controls can be a bigger nightmare than the haunted world Pac-Man finds himself in, this game is worth checking out!

Is NASCAR 15 a GOTY worthy game? Absolutely not. But man the nostalgia I have of playing this game and the fact that it holds up pretty well (especially with the Heat games being...something) brings this up to a 5. I also love seeing the old roster, and how much it's changed from them to now. Kaulig, Trackhouse, and 23XI don't exist. But BK Racing, LiveFast, Phil Parsons, MWR, all there. It's just so much fun going back to this old roster and having 5 of my all-time favorites in the same game: Carl Edwards, Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Chase Elliott, and Ryan Blaney. Tony Stewart is awesome too! It may not be the best NASCAR game ever but I have so much nostalgia for 15 and it's just a blast to play!

✅76%

LittleBigPlanet is a unique little platformer. It's style, look, and level design are different from any other platformer I've played, and that adds refreshment to this game. While not having a direct threat but instead a few villains per world, its narrative of travelling through this little big planet is engaging and grabs the player into wanting to see more. Its look is really cool with this crafty look, and the color is so good to look at. Visually, this game is great. The problems lie in the controls and the up and down level design. The controls are more floaty than a cloud. Sometimes the game would get the best of me, but a lot of deaths were unnecessarily caused by the controls. The level design would also go from great to really generic to frustrating. Most levels landed in the good design tier, but man some were just evil like The Bunker and Collector's Lair. Despite these flaws, I still really liked LittleBigPlanet. It's uniqueness and style carries to make it an interesting playthrough. Is the platforming special? No, but it's different, and that's what counts.

👌63%

I've had this game for a long time but never got around to playing it until now. Wall-E is one of my all-time favorite films, so I was excited to play this game. Licensed games, especially Pixar ones, can be really bland but I actually had a fun time with this one. It isn't a great game as its own, but being in this world is a lot of fun and spending time with these characters is always a plus. Missions can feel a little repetitive at times and EVE can be a nightmare to control, but nevertheless I enjoyed the video game version of Wall-E! Not offensively bad like other Pixar games, but something suitable and a good few hours.

I've only been playing RoStock for NASCAR and I was reminded why I stopped playing this game.