Edward Kenway Returns: The Black Flag Resynced Review
The Caribbean has never looked this crisp, and stepping back into the shoes of Edward Kenway feels like catching a perfect gust of wind on a pristine morning.
The Caribbean has never looked this crisp, and stepping back into the shoes of Edward Kenway feels like catching a perfect gust of wind on a pristine morning.
The world of tactical mech warfare fires up with the explosive, retro energy of a classic 2000s shonen anime. You command a full mercenary squad from your high-flying airship, soaring over a machine-ruled wasteland to salvage scraps, take contracts, and engage in cinematic turn-based grid battles.
The world looks grand from a distance, pulling you into a great-looking third-person space packed with memorable locations that promise a proper action RPG adventure.
The flashing blue lights and wide open highway networks promise the ultimate German patrol fantasy, but the reality of this experience leaves you stranded on a hard shoulder of mechanical frustration.
The rain-soaked, crumbling streets of a dystopian British exclusion zone threaten to swallow you whole, dripping with a suffocating fog and thick tension that immediately pulls you into its grim world.
Within minutes, the creepy atmosphere of this sinister, haunted house completely grabs you and refuses to let go. You find yourself wandering a full 3D world in a tense first-person view, surrounded by gorgeous visuals that make every single corner feel deeply unsettling.
Stepping into a run-down, beat-up property with nothing but a laptop and a tablet instantly sets a strange, addictive vibe where your only goal is total transformation.
You are instantly dropped straight into a gloomy 1940s Transylvanian rectory where a young priest gets tangled up in forbidden desires and a mysterious death.
Nitro City Racing drops you right onto a frantic, high-speed highway where dodging traffic by a hair’s breadth is the only thing keeping you from a massive metal-twisting wreck.
You are instantly dropped into a world where a gorgeous mix of dense forests, ancient buildings, and forgotten towns practically beg to be explored.
Step into a breathtaking world where beautiful hand drawn art graphics and powerful swipes of colour illuminate your screen with absolute style.
FZ: Formation Z drops you headfirst into a stunning 2.5D world where massive 3D mechs and enemies collide in a beautifully destructive dance of lasers and metal.
The screen accelerates time, cutting through a high-octane montage of raw training routines that instantly grabs you by the throat and drags you headfirst into the sleek world of MI6.
You step into the trotters of Boris, a tiny baby boar with a massive nose and a surprisingly high level of literacy, set loose in a sprawling 3D world.
Drop Duchy Complete Edition feels like someone took a medieval war board game and smashed it into a classic block-stacker, then wrapped the whole thing in a gritty, hand-drawn art style.
An old, run-down amusement park rotting away inside a foggy forest is the perfect staging ground for a nightmare, and this game nails that unsettling mood right out of the gate.
The neon glow of arcade lasers and the relentless anxiety of auto-scrolling death are back, and they do not care about your feelings.
Booting up this package instantly transports you back to the golden era of late-90s licensed video games, dripping with that classic Nickelodeon aesthetic.
Starting a brand new transport empire from scratch is a massive undertaking that balances zen-like driving with absolute, high-stakes chaos. Bus Bound thrusts you right into the captain’s seat of a detailed, sprawling world where keeping a schedule is just as vital as keeping your passengers alive.
Bubsy is back and he’s just as annoying as you remember, flinging himself into a full 3D world that feels like it’s held together with spit and prayer.