
This War of Mine: The Little Ones
With The Little Ones, This War of Mine’s video game role reversal is more brilliant than ever, but the expansion on its own is rather underwhelming.
With The Little Ones, This War of Mine’s video game role reversal is more brilliant than ever, but the expansion on its own is rather underwhelming.
The fact that this is just a one-to-one recreation of the physical product isn’t too much of a problem.
It’s mostly nonsense, but it’s extremely entertaining nonsense.
Instead of trying to push the definition of a game at the expense of all else, Journey is lighter on experimentation but heavy on refinement.
The vast array of available actions that come with a deck-builder combine with the procedural generation of a roguelike to form one of the most addictive single-player games in existence.
While The Wolf Among Us proves The Walking Dead wasn’t entirely a flash in the pan, in hindsight, it’s clear that the studio had no idea what to do with its signature style.
This is like the gaming equivalent of Oscar bait – using up a whole lot of artistic talent to say a whole lot of nothing.
Life is Strange is like a punk or folk song in video game form – a lack of refinement is the price you pay for authenticity.
GRIS is undoubtedly one of the most beautiful games ever released, but it doesn’t have much going for it otherwise.
Prior to a certain cut-off point, this game was wall-to-wall quality, and I regret nothing about its purchase.