Persona 5 Royal

Persona 5 Royal

Persona 5 Royal is a masterwork of its genre. This is a game that is beyond refined and stands atop its peers. Its characters, story, and stylish charm fill every second of its 100+ hour length, and the nearly unlimited freedom of tinkering with everything and everyone around you to suit your needs makes every possible second feel incredibly worthwhile and rewarding.

Bayonetta 3

Bayonetta 3

Bayonetta 3 is great for the elements that make it a Bayonetta game. Combat and weapon variety is some of the series best with a wealth of options that constantly impress. However, the game’s visuals are often wildly inconsistent and its multiverse narrative is just downright disappointing.

Gotham Knights

Gotham Knights

While there are elements of a solid game here in Gotham Knights, it sticks far too close to the DNA of what has worked better before. Nearly every aspect of this adventure is built on the foundation of bad ideas, no matter how well some of them do tend to work. It can be fun, sure, but it could have been so much better.

Mario + Rabbids: Sparks of Hope

Mario + Rabbids: Sparks of Hope

Mario + Rabbids: Sparks of Hope is a damn impressive sequel that not only refines what came before but does it in such a way that it makes every single aspect of the experience better. From freeform movement and voice lines for your Rabbids companions, this adventure is certainly one worth taking, even if the Switch struggles with it from time to time.

Trifox

Trifox

Glowfish Interactive might not be a studio you are familiar with. The Belgium-based developer has put out only a few titles so far, but with Trifox, that just might change. Trifox sees you taking on an evil pirate that has stolen your TV remote, tracking them down across three sizable worlds before confronting them once and for all.

Nickelodeon Kart Racers 3: Slime Speedway

Nickelodeon Kart Racers 3: Slime Speedway

Kart Racers 3: Slime Speedway, feels developed in mind to address the criticisms of its past, a racer placed in an already crowded genre where each and every kart racer out there seems to be taking a page out of the Mario Kart playbook. While it is undoubtedly a better and more feature-rich release than its predecessors, it still lacks that certain something to push it over the finish line.

Soulstice

Soulstice

Soulstice pulls a great deal of inspiration from the Devil May Cry series, especially that of its reboot in DmC. Briar and Lute, two sisters fused into a single body, must investigate a tear in the fabric of reality, spewing forth deadly creatures and powerful wraiths, all while attempting to not become the very thing they are tasked with stopping.

Steelrising

Steelrising

Steelrising is French developer, Spiders, take on the Soulslike, set in an alternative history where the French Revolution was fought with an army of mechanized creatures called Automats. As an Automat herself, Aegis will track down the man responsible for this threat, all while diving into her very own unique origins.

Hardspace Shipbreaker

Hardspace Shipbreaker

Hardspace Shipbreaker has a great deal in common with another game I played this year; Powerwash Simulator. While the games couldn’t be any more different, the mundane act of performing simple labor still places both titles in a very similar lane. Stepping out of my airlock to dismantle a lifeless ship piece by piece kept my interest for several hours, even if some tedium started to present itself.

Saints Row

Saints Row

This latest iteration of Saints Row is a full-on reboot, taking bits and pieces of the previous games under the control of a whole new boss with a brand new crew. While the open-world sandbox nature of the game is still as fun as ever, nearly everything else is bland, boring, and filled to the brim with a vast array of technical issues.

Xenoblade Chronicles 3

Xenoblade Chronicles 3

Xenoblade Chronicles 3 is Monolith Soft’s greatest achievement, crafting a world and narrative so breathtakingly stunning that I relished every last minute of my 140-hour playthrough. While it certainly has the Switch’s hardware bursting at the seams, it nonetheless impresses at nearly every turn. In short, it’s an undeniable masterpiece.