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Uneven pacing and a handful of poor design decisions can't bring down Cradle's unique, sci-fi mystery.
Undertale combines charming characters, smart writing, and a unique combat system to make one of this fall's biggest surprises.
Destiny's biggest expansion to date makes the game a whole lot more enjoyable and easier to recommend.
The Beginner's Guide offers a personal and sometimes eerie perspective on amateur game development.
Don't play this game.
Rock Band 4 feels more like a maintenance release than a proper relaunch of this once-popular franchise.
You'll spot some rough edges and notice some omissions, but Halo 5 looks great, plays well, and has enough options to keep you coming back.
The quality feel of the driving and nice-looking environment are buried under heaps of technical issues and bland objectives.
You'd think a game with this many modes and features would be more exciting than it is.
It doesn't offer many surprises, but Syndicate represents a return to form for Assassin's Creed.
WWE 2K16 improves on the many things wrong with last year's game, but not nearly enough.
A bolder, more capable Lara Croft returns for an adventure that's more varied and fun than Tomb Raider has seen in years.
Fallout 4 may feel overly familiar to some, but there are plenty of places to go, people to see, and mutants to shoot, and most of those things are still exciting to visit, look at, and murder (though not necessarily in that order). The occasionally extreme performance issues found in the console versions of Fallout 4 make those versions more difficult to recommend than their PC counterpart. [OpenCritic note: PC version rated 4/5 stars. XB1 and PS4 versions rated at 3/5 stars.]
Slick production values, solid controls, and tons of fan service can't make up for mediocre progression and a lack of content.
Rico's third adventure stays the course, but at least this course involves slingshotting cows off of cliffs.
The intricate puzzles and tantalizing secrets of this starkly gorgeous, mystical island are enough to lose yourself in for dozens of hours.
AlphaDream hits the mark again in terms of combat and dialogue, even if some new additions fall flat.
Campo Santo's debut adventure offers up a taut mystery built around two tremendously engaging characters.
Firaxis delivers a fantastic sequel in many regards, but a large assortment of technical issues plague the overall experience.
Capcom moves the venerable series forward, but not without taking a couple steps back.