Despite being a perfect rhythm game for the series at its core, Kingdom Hearts Melody of Memory pulls a shocking amount of punches.

The gameplay is just serviceable enough to allow the immense drip of Sonic and The Black Knight to shine.

I wish Touhou Luna Nights went on forever.

Overwatch is a triumph in the "parasite video game" genre

Knuckles' Chaotix is SEGA at their most brazen; it's loud, clumsy, and has an immense technical depth, which results in an audaciously bizarre time capsule.

Ristar is 90s SEGA at their most understated; creating a cozy, nuanced, and rewarding platformer.

I don't know what's more commendable; Disco Elysium being my favorite literary work, or that I hit credits while having surely read less than half of the dialogue.

Half-Life is an elaborate physics dungeon made out of toothpicks and scotch-tape... and when it's not hellish, I love it.

The accuracy with which LSD: Dream Emulator depicts the chaos, beauty, and depravity of dreams is unmatched.

With ReMind, a super well-optimized PC release, and a handful of band-aid mods, Kingdom Hearts III is absolutely worthy of being in the legendary pantheon shared with its numbered brothers.

Breakdown is a deeply haunted Japanese re-interpretation of Half-Life that pushes through its slog with sheer insanity alone.

Even though Super Mario Galaxy sometimes fails to fully satisfy, you still love his vibe.

Super Mario Galaxy 2 definitely improved in the sheets, but the vibe just isn't the same anymore.

SUPERHOT nails its gimmick with perfect simplicity.

Xenoblade Chronicles X is incessantly mixed.