A masterpiece sequel adding wonderful setpieces, art design and voicr acting onto one of the best puzzle games ever, This is the kind of game that goes down in history immediately.

An over-marketed patch to Blizzard's weakest release ever, Overwatch is a mediocre shooter that fails to deliver on any gameplay merits due to a shortsighted focus on making a FPS that has the same flow and spectator value as a MOBA, but fails miserably in practice by making it a tug of war of damage and healing.

The only place you can find the trademark "Blizzard Polish" is the art design and optimozation.

The true successor to World of Warcraft, Final Fantasy XIV lives up to its hype by massively reducing the tediousness that is considered the standard gameplay for MMOs, A well crafted story, a plethora of content and a whole lot of love make this the perfect entry or forever home for anyone looking to get into the genre.

However, praise is held back due to poor basegame content quality, sloppy netcode and outdated systems.

A mediocre asymm carried purely due to its crossovers and the fact that any competition can hardly last a few months before dropping dead.

Unless you have 3-4 friends to play with, avoid this one.

The perfect way to end a trilogy, AA3 is filled to the brim with charming characters, gripping stories and wonderful music, If you ever play a VN, let it be this one.

The best overrated game you'll ever play.

A clunky BR with awful shooting mechanics bloated with updates and gutted out months later does not lead to a fun experience, especially not when paired with a shallow, grindy, bland PvE concept.

An early access title still knee deep in development years later, Tower Unite is a show on why not to be as overambitious as you can be with a mod, Poor fundamentals with bad netcodes and general UE silliness leave a bad example for the final product.

This game is a FPS that pretends it isn't by throwing awful grinds, expensive expansion prices and MMO-ish content at you.

What I expected to make me roll my eyes with honeymoon identity discovering slop that a lot of queer media seems to have a problem with, ended up just delighting me with a fun, humorous love letter to old-school RPGs that can manage to have the LGBT side as a major theme, without making it just about the only thing that matters.

This game is great at combining what makes RE7 and RE4 work, but fails to understand that just because 2 things are great doesn't mean they'll work great together, leaving the tone to be all over the place, which doesn't help with the poor level design throughout the entire experience.

An overhated hidden gem in the franchise, this game is a must play if you and a friend love the series, building off of the back of Resident Evil 4's gameplay this game struggles in comparison due to removing elements such as inventory management, and making enemy and level designs more in the style of the final act of 4, still offers an incredibly fun experience and is absolutely carried by the boss fights and over-the top action.

The perfect way to remake a game, it succeeds at nailing the claustrophobic horror thought only possible with fixed cameras and has plenty of bonus content to keep you entertained far after the first clear.
Gameplay is tight, combining the puzzle solving, atmosphere and pace of the original whilst having the satisfying gameplay and silky movement more recent titles like 4 are known for.

What is there to say about this game that hasn't already been said? It's a master-class in third person action and juggles that with a tone only matched by Devil May Cry, great voice acting, and satisfying sound design.
This game not only defines its own series, or its own genre, but an entire point of time around its release.
If you haven't played this yet, you're missing out.

While this game fails in the department of environmental variety or interesting open-world design, it succeeds in making one of the most fun FPS experience I had in a decent while, making it feel like you're always coming up with your own solutions to combat encounters whilst not making it feel overbearing.
This has been an instant classic in a series I've grown up with since I was just a kid.