Shaun Prescott
Easy going in tone but frantic and stressful by nature, Screencheat seizes on a single novel idea and builds an enjoyable couch shooter around it.
Kalimba is a beautiful, cheerful platformer that finds a neat middle ground between reflex-oriented running and taxing puzzle solving.
A big, beautiful, sprawling action RPG full of rich stories, and suffused with an oppressive darkness.
A challenging and atmospheric platformer with a remarkable sense of tension, occasionally let down by finicky controls and unfair fail states.
A satisfying, self-contained adventure that plays to the series' strengths, but doesn't add anything novel outside of its storytelling.
A masterful distillation of classic action-platforming gameplay, doling out tension and elation in equal measure.
A decent enough expansion, but it doesn't reach the great heights of previous post-launch outings.
A beautiful adventure platformer with a cheerful pixel art veneer, but with very modern themes.
Few will see the more remote corners of Rain World’s relentlessly dire stretch, but those who do are unlikely to forget the experience.
A blissfully fluid action game with a compelling twist, let down occasionally by tedious encounters.
A satisfying, moreish take on the roguelike formula, and one that's most likely to appeal to genre naysayers.
An engaging, vibrant and challenging platformer that adds narrative to a genre often shy of it.
A prickly 2D Metroidvania with a curious twist, Dandara admirably finds something new to do with the genre, but it's tough work to get onboard.
The pixel-art is faultless and the gameplay is pleasingly reminiscent of the classics, but Timespinner doesn't offer much that feels new.
Spelunky 2 doesn't advance the original's formula, but there's more stuff to sink your teeth into.
Elsewhere, there's a mission to reach the stratosphere, as well as five "high-speed, low-level" challenges that are also focused on navigating tricky, mountainous terrain without crashing and exploding and dying.
Gory and moody, The Callisto Protocol doesn't mess with the survival horror formula, instead embracing all its beats and clichés to tell a grim sci-fi tale that drips with menace.
Combining moody and gratifying ship-on-ship combat with shallow live service trappings, Skull and Bones is great within the claustrophobic parameters of what market forces allow it to be.
A bizarre, confronting and darkly funny descent into hell, Indika takes a lot of risks and mostly sticks the landing.
A sleep-destroying puzzle metroidvania of baffling depth, Animal Well may go down in history as one of the genre's best.