This is an open world game done right. It's so good that other games start looking bad in comparison. Each time I got to a new area, I felt excited to explore and see what was out there, as opposed to say Assassin's Creed: Valhalla where it was just a constant loop of doing the exact same things over and over again.

I put 160 hours into my first playthrough and am excited to go back for more.

Nioh 2 is a fine game, but it's held back by various issues. Some of those issues are absurd difficultly spikes, suddenly forcing you to play single player to progress when the rest can be played multiplayer, and some broken enemy attacks. I can't count the number of times I died when the enemy suddenly unleashed an attack that had no wind up and would either pin me to the ground and do massive damage or explode on me. Monsters also are not held back by ki like you are. They have ki meters, but they don't matter for the most part because as hard as you may work at depleting the ki to get a critical hit in, they can just decide not be staggered, attack you, and then recover all ki. And if that's not enough, numerous monsters have input reading and will dodge out of the way of your attack the moment you press the button. That's not challenging, that's flat-out cheating. The level design is downright confusing at times as well. I'm glad I played this with a friend, otherwise, I would have just given up.

My favorite soulsborne game. The fast-paced, challenging combat that demands you pay attention to it, the gothic setting, the music, everything about this game is a masterpiece. It may be my favorite game from the PS4 generation.

I love this remake. This is a remake done right. I vastly prefer this true to form remake to the bloated mess we got for FF7.

This review contains spoilers

This game is a great follow up to the previous one. They took what worked and improved on it. That said, I don't think the game is perfect. I had to deal with a few glitches that forced me to restart the game and there were numerous graphical glitches. I also wish there were more smaller planets rather than a few large ones. Ubisoft has kind of killed my desire to fully explore large maps, so I don't see myself going back and 100%ing this game any time soon. As this one is very much the Empire of the Jedi games, I am looking forward to seeing where they take the story in the inevitable third part.

Very impressive for a small team, but the combat is slow, clunky, and just not fun. Dark Souls was slow, but it also gave you a shield so you could get used to the mechanics. This game has a one time block that has a cooldown. It looks cool, but taking away the shield and replacing it with this mechanic weakens combat and makes it unintersting.

This game had so much potential. The developers only needed a few more months to polish things and tighten up the net code. It could have been something great. Unfortunately, I cannot review what does not exist. As is, they have done a lot to fix it and it's fun to play with friends, but it's still a buggy mess with hard enemies = bullet sponges. I don't think I could stomach playing it alone though.

Great games with terrible emulation.

Easily the best single player Call of Duty campaign, and quite possibly one of the best FPS games ever. It does not get 5 stars though, simply because it still struggles with the kill boxes that all CoD single player campaigns struggle with, where regardless of what you try, you get repeatedly surrounded and gunned down by enemies you never see coming.

That said, the story and the pacing, as well as the gun play, are all top notch. I don't care for multiplayer, so I haven't touched it, but the single player is well worth the time.

It's a fantastic game filled with beauty and blood, just like the classic samurai flicks that they were channeling. Loved every minute of this game.

Game is great. Tight gameplay and fun exploration. Everyone I've heard complain about this game never even played it.

This review contains spoilers

There is so much to say about this game. It's not bad, but it doesn't hold a candle to Three Houses. In fact, the game pretty much expects you to have played Three Houses first, which weakens the experience here.

I heard that the story changes in this are due in part to feedback taken from the fans on Three Houses' story. Man, did Nintendo ever listen to the wrong fans as the story comes across as self-insert fan fiction. So far, I have only played Edelgard's route, so I can't speak for the other houses, but her decision to throw off the shackles of Those that Slither in the Dark at the very start of her route due to the appearance of one guy is absurd, especially since TTSITD have heavily ingrained themselves into the Empire. It screams of a self-insert Gary/Mary Sue with how Shez can just come in and fix everything in one go.

This isn't even to mention the major changes in Edelgard's character. They changed her from a complex, morally gray woman, into someone that's willing to throw away years and years of planning because she met one guy. In Three Houses, she doesn't open up right away to Byleth. She knows Byleth is more than capable, but doesn't know if she can trust them yet. She spends time trying to see if Byleth is someone she can rely on and put her trust in. She just jumps right into the deep end with Shez and throws all caution into the wind. At times her reasons for trusting Shez are as weak as wet paper, but still, she choses to trust Shez for some reason.

The game does go on to do something I wished was an option in Three Houses, which is the leaders all working together (at one point at least). But that is not enough to correct what they failed to do, which is make me care about the characters. They cut the academy part way down, which is a choice based on more fan feedback as far as I can tell. But in doing that, they also cut back on any time I had in this game to get to know anyone outside of my chosen house unless I chose to recruit them. And why would I recruit them if I didn't already know them? This bit only goes to support my above statement on how they expect you to have played Three Houses. If I hadn't played Three Houses first, I wouldn't have known how great the other characters are. Why would I spend recourses recruiting them in that case?

You spend hours during the pre-war time in Three Houses as a teacher and have numerous opportunities to get to know the other students. It is a fun challenge (unless you just use a wiki) to try and recruit other students, and it feels great when they finally agree to join you. Failing to recruit someone adds immense weight when you are forced to kill them in the war. I don't think I'll ever forget my first Three Houses playthrough, where I recruited Mercedes into Black Eagle and then ended up having her kill Annette in the final battle because I didn't recognize the music-loving red head before I issued the order. There is nothing like that in Three Hopes. There is no weight at all here, especially when the only thing you need to do to recruit someone most of the time is select the option before the battle starts. There are a few times where there is a requirement to fulfil in order to recruit someone, but I can only think of two out of several. In order to recruit Mercedes, I needed to have Jeritza present in the battle. He was severely under leveled for me at that point, so I spent the resources to get him up to speed in order to recruit Mercedes. But if I hadn't already grown to love her due to Three Houses, I wouldn't have bothered here because they do nothing to endear the other students to you before throwing you into the war.

As for the decision for replacing Byleth with Shez as the main character, it still baffles me. Everyone I know feels the same. Byleth was a well-loved main character. I've seen a few people say on this site say that Byleth was boring, but that's it. Everyone else I know, or see online, loves them. If they feel Byleth is boring, I don't understand how they can enjoy Shez. The male voice actor (Japanese version) gives the most bland performance I have heard in years. He has the exact same monotone voice delivery regardless of what's going on. He gives the same emotional level (all flat) whether he's pissed and hunting down Byleth for revenge, or complementing Dorothea on her singing. Even Byleth's emotionless reactions more emotional depth than Shez. When I saw the reveal trailer for Shez, my first thought was, "Oh, another bland Warriors protagonist instead of someone I want to play." Turns out, my gut reaction was right. Shez is just a boring, self-insert character. Each mission where I didn't need to include Shez, I played as Byleth.

I also feel the need to include the complete lack of any post story for any character whatsoever. I spent all this time with these people and then there's nothing. The only thing I got was a letter from Mercedes because I gave her the merc whistle in chapter 11. I spent all this time improving the support levels of my army and they gave me nothing. I get that the ranks help out in battle, but the bonus was miniscule and part of the fun in recent Fire Emblem games is seeing what your team does after the war ends. In this one, you get nothing except one letter from someone you can pick halfway through the game.

It's not all bad. The combat is great. They streamlined the training and upgrading units. They took what they learned from the first FEW game and improved on it here. They removed the timer when selecting reactions during dates. I do feel like there isn't enough to do in camp though. That got old real fast.

In short, this game focuses too much on combat, which is fun, and not enough on character, which is why I love the Fire Emblem games.

2016

Played this on my vanilla PS4 and it felt like my system was going to melt from the sheer awesomeness of this game. (I later upgraded to a Pro and it runs without any issues)

Hard to give this a high or low score. It's the first of its kind and it hasn't aged very well, but we wouldn't have the FPS genre without this game.

Years ago I got to the final boss and he's super obnoxious. No desire to finish it at this point.