Inside
Reviews
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After 120 hours, 50 levels gained, 100+ quests completed and a higher body count than the Khmer Rouge, its safe to say that Bethesda has provided a much needed fix. Fallout 4 is their most ambitious world yet,… read more...
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In western territories, otome games are still relatively new. A few years ago, North American and European fans saw the release of Hakuoki, and the series has slowly spanned across several consoles now. Since … read more...
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In many ways, Rainbow Six Siege feels like the smallest AAA game you can buy right now. Of course, this shouldn’t be taken as a slur but rather as an indicator that the game is laser focused in its vocation; … read more...
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Ostensibly, it would all be all too tempting to simply kick this review off with a familiar introduction – “another year, another WWE game”. However, such a beginning would grossly sell short the huge … read more...
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Sublevel Zero is a first-person roguelike six-degrees-of-freedom shooter—a mouthful, to be sure. The player is the unnamed pilot of a small scout ship which has happened upon an ancient complex hidden away … read more...
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Hey everyone, get in here! Hearthstone’s Grand Tournament has been out for a couple months, which provided plenty of opportunities to playtest. The last article took a look at some of the under-the-radar… read more...
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Rock Band 4 is here. Like many other members of the press that were lucky enough to have the game in their hot little hands, I have been playing Rock Band 4 for about two weeks as of this writing. Those that … read more...
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Given the prestige of some of its top properties, Nintendo has a difficult conundrum on its hands whenever an anniversary rolls around. Just how do you celebrate thirty years of a character and series as … read more...
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When it comes to keeping me on-side with their racing games, Microsoft and Turn 10 Studios has a problem. It isn’t that they killed Project Gotham Racing (how could they, though?) – But rather … read more...
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The Grand Tournament has finally reached the general public. Hero powers just got a lot more interesting, and blood sacrifices to RNJesus won’t be crucial for a winning record, now that Goblins vs. Gnomes… read more...
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Usually, when you have an extremely cliché premise, chances are that whatever creative work you try to build around it will be schematic, boring and soulless. Rarely, the team heading the project is so adept … read more...
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It has been a few years since the indie gaming scene’s popularity explosion happened, and we can safely say that the indie industry progresses on what seems to be a perpetually flattening staircase. When … read more...
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Sunset, developed by Tale of Tales, is the kind of game that fills a specific niche. This is the Dear Esther and Gone Home category of game, where we get the bare minimum of gameplay needed to push the story … read more...
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I am a fan of the love letter game. When I say a love letter game, I’m talking about those titles that play solely on the player’s familiarity with a series. These games require heavy nostalgia lenses to … read more...
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It’s August in the year 1997. The light breeze complements the warmth of the sun, and it’s a perfect day for tossing a ball, taking a hike, climbing a tree. Yet the neighborhood baseball diamond is … read more...
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“I wonder if anyone will ever get tired of arena based battle games?” said no one ever. These days when you think of four-player versus fighting games, what usually comes to mind are the Super Smash Bros. … read more...
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Back in 2006 when Square Enix announced the Fabula Nova Crystallis trifecta of Final Fantasy XIII, Final Fantasy Versus XIII, and Final Fantasy Agito XIII, I (like so many others) was immediately hyped up and … read more...
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Mortal Kombat X, Borderlands: The Handsome Collection and Dark Souls 2: Scholar of the First Sin. I had intended to play all of these games a fair whack over this past weekend, but that just didn’t … read more...