This was the first VR game I ever played and it ruined everything else for me forever. An immaculate experience that completely changed my outlook on the future of video games.

A wonderful return-to-form for the Hitman franchise - awork of love clearly fuelled by experienced and passionate developers. Uniquely puzzle-esque compared to it's predecessors.

A fun little medieval battle simulator with great combat, but currently lacks many features that would make it great. Worth the price now, but will be worth so much more in the future as development completes.

Incredibly challenging and unforgiving, but the sense of accomplishment from conquering each biome and mastering the mechanics is unlike any other.

Nothing beats the world building, art direction, and utter richness of Karnaca that oozes from every nook and cranny. While the story leaves much to be desired, it's still a worthy sequel to the original game.

As much of a meme as it's since become, this was a revolutionary type of horror game for its time.

Almost painful to enjoy as a Resident Evil fan. While some fun gameplay is there, a terrible story with misused characters makes this hard to get through.

A tech demo for Phantom Pain. It's a fun little experience, but it doesn't provide much today the way it did in the months leading up to Kojima's final Metal Gear installment.

The one that's worth replaying in the series. Builds upon what made Drake's Fortune great, with even better level design and an engaging story.

Revolutionary for its time, but it hasn't aged well. Provided a perfect basis to be developed upon in future games, but not worth re-playing.

As a long-term fan of the franchise, Kingdom Hearts III was very disappointing. Nomura focused too hard on tying everything up into a neat little bow, resulting in a story with very little stakes and an ending that felt forced and unfulfilling. Combined with a boring gameplay loop of the various worlds, this long-awaited conclusion fell far from the mark.

It may be simple compared to the newer games, but I still found it to be a very enjoyable sci-fi RPG experience that holds up to this day.

It just doesn't scratch that nostalgic itch from the original games of my childhood - too much has changed in the decades since the PS2 games, and I just couldn't find the fun that I needed.

I liked it as a kid, but it's hard to appreciate in the shadow of New Vegas now. Issues with both the game itself and the narrative therein are glaring, but the basic concepts of the open world and freedom of choice still decent to this day.

I struggled to enjoy Guns of the Patriots - while interesting mechanics promoted engagement, tedious pacing and rampant boring cutscenes made this a hard play even for a fan of Metal Gear like myself.