Cassandra Khaw
Beautiful but bug-riddled, Impact Winter isn't the game it could be yet.
Like Police Quest meets Papers, Please on a grim day.
Nuclear family.
Project X Zone 2 is a hilarious but sometimes tiresome genre mashup of every crossover you ever wanted.
Repetitive but charming, Yo-Kai Watch is a kid's game through and through.
Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam Bros is wholesome, warm, but occasionally wearisome.
Hearts of Stone subverts some tropes while holding onto others. A delightful romp, if you need more Witcher 3 with your Witcher 3.
Tooth and Tail is a deft and minimalist RTS that's slick as a knife through the ribs.
Emily is Away Too is a surprisingly poignant trip down memory lane.
A glorious ride down a futuristic California that never was.
Thimbleweed Park is what would happen if you moved Nightvale into Monkey Island, and gave everyone too much rum.
Tokyo Mirage Sessions: #FE is an imperfect yet brilliant marriage of two beloved franchises.
Bravely Second is an unapologetic sequel to a JRPG that is a spiritual successor to another, and all the better for it.
Dazzling and mysterious, this ambitious party-based RPG is a masterpiece.
Beautiful, badass and audacious, Persona 5 is going to steal your heart.
The Wolf Among Us: Smoke and Mirrors treads some dark waters, spitting grit and quiet reminders that the world is a cold, hard place. Like its predecessor, Smoke and Mirrors enjoys great writing, excellent voice acting and a lead who is likeable in all the right ways. That said, the second chapter in The Wolf Among Us feels somewhat too short -- like a build-up, a segue to bigger things. There are also moments where the writing trips, leaving players to wonder if Bigby's been hit on the head one too many times.
Banished is like the quiet kid in school: unassuming, down-to-earth but also filled with hidden depths. If you're looking for a no-nonsense city builder that demands you keep a handle on important things like food, warmth and how much beer your citizens have. Once you've figured out the basic mechanics, Banished's appeal can dip slightly but there remains something weirdly engrossing about watching the seasons pass.
Practically oozing fan service from every pore, Burial at Sea is both as glorious and as imperfect as Rapture itself. The visuals are sensational, the combat a reasonably healthy marriage between Bioshock and Bioshock Infinite. Booker and Elizabeth both take well to their detective noir roles. Yet, like the promise of Rapture itself, Burial at Sea's splendor doesn't last forever. Things go unexplained, shrugged off as the too-short DLC rushes towards its conclusion.
You've always got to look out for the attractive ones. Contrast is a bit of a hot mess -- kind of like the bumbling Johnny Fenris in its core. Rife with bugs and prone towards glitching in the worst possible ways, Compulsion Games' pretty little title can and will outrage. If you're willing to overlook the brokenness of its platforming, Contrast is dazzling in almost every other capacity.
Magic, leafy submarines, intricate puzzles, and wonder abound in point-and-click adventure The Night of the Rabbit.