Cameron Woolsey
Deadfall Adventures is a boring, glitchy, and repetitive shooter with too few moments of clarity.
Q*bert: Rebooted will leave you struggling with awful controls when you're not nodding off to the tedium.
Mable & The Wood comes with an interesting take on combat, but shoddy controls, bugs, and odd storytelling prevent it from being an enjoyable journey through the game's cursed kingdom.
Moebius: Empire Rising is a short adventure bogged down by dull characters and tedious puzzle solving.
A host of glitches keep Wayward Manor feeling anything but welcoming.
Carmageddon: Reincarnation is a tired and clunky reboot of a better game suited for a different time.
Daylight hits the right mood at first, but the creepy atmosphere is pushed aside for lame jump scares and hollow gameplay.
Toy Soldiers: War Chest is a fun tower defense game marred by paywalls and glitches.
Dirty Bomb is frantic and entertaining, but doesn't exactly sparkle with originality and stability.
Gomo has heart, but its brevity and lack of challenge keep it from being worth your while.
Nether's dire world can be immersive, but glaring issues ranging from unbalanced mechanics to glitches prevent you from getting swept away.
You're trapped in a maze-like Hell in Scathe, but while the shooting is solid, the rest of the game may put you into a haze.
Battletoads is a reboot of the classic Rare franchise, but fails to recapture the excitement and fun of the originals.
Moments of stealth-flavored enjoyment in The Blackout Club are often overshadowed by the game's unpolished state, with bugs and repetition robbing the game's mysteries with growing frustration.
Verdun brings multiplayer shooting to World War I in all its glory, as well as the frequent boredom.
Victor Vran treads familiar ground, bringing exciting combat to an overall sufficient action RPG.
Claptastic Voyage tries to shine with awesome new weapons, enemy types, and some incredible environments, but lackluster missions tarnish the luster.
Slow Down, Bull is a friendly and occasionally frustrating game with plenty of good morals to share and an admirable goal.
Emotional storytelling and challenging gameplay can't wholly save Gods Will Be Watching from some of its bad design choices.
Unrest is an unconventional but erratic adventure game that inspires empathy even as it undercuts its own message.