Reviews

  • Divinity II: Ego Draconis

    If there's one area where Divinity 2 truly succeeds, it's in your ability to transform into a dragon

  • Army of Two: The 40th Day

    An all-around decent experience but there's nothing exceptionally special about Army of Two: The 40th Day

  • Bayonetta

    Gaming guru Hideki Kamiya bursts onto next-gen consoles with his latest masterpiece

  • Borderlands: Mad Moxxi's Underdome Riot

    What makes Mad Moxxie more than just a mindless experience is the way the demented host starts toying with the playing field after the first round

  • Darksiders

    God of War meets... er, God of War

  • Naruto Shippuden: Clash of Ninja Revolution 3

    Released a little over a year ago in Japan, Clash of Ninja 3 shifts the original Clash of Ninja's focus to Naruto's sequel series, Naruto Shippuden

  • Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: The Crystal Bearers

    Crystal Bearers is slick and polished but it somehow comes off feeling like a half-finished product

  • Guitar Hero: Van Halen

    This expansion fails to properly categorise the band's achievements, making it nothing more than a glorified track pack

  • Tales of Monkey Island: Chapter 5

    While it's a bit unusual for a protagonist to be killed before the final episode of a series, when it comes to Tales of Monkey Island you should expect the unexpected

  • The Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks

    You'll find yourself scribbling on the DS' touchscreen with the stylus, playing a flute by blowing into the mic, and attacking enemies by smacking them on the touch screen

  • Silent Hill: Shattered Memories

    At the end of the day, Silent Hill: Shattered Memories isn't a bad game by any means

  • Shaun White Snowboarding: World Stage

    Sticking close to what made the Wii version last year's best option, World Stage should be familiar to anyone who hopped on his or her balance boards or waggled their Wii Remotes in Road Trip

  • EA Games Rock Band for iPhone

    Rock Band provides fantastic visuals, a great list of songs and multiplayer gaming

  • James Cameron's Avatar: The Game

    James Cameron's Avatar: The Video Game only furthers the point, rather than dispels it, that the movie-to-video game genre is as treacherous as the planet of Pandora itself

  • The Saboteur

    Pitting players in the badass boots of rough-and-tumble Irishman Sean Devlin, Saboteur places our unlikely hero in the thick of Nazi-occupied France

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