Cyberpunk 2077

Cyberpunk 2077

Cyberpunk 2077 is certainly not without its flaws. While the game is largely broken and unplayable on various platforms, my time with it on the Series X has been nothing short of well.. breathtaking. The long-awaited follow-up to CDPR’s Witcher 3 is here, and it’s a true cinematic masterpiece. Prepare to jack-in.

Immortals: Fenyx Rising

Immortals: Fenyx Rising

Immortals: Fenyx Rising is a charming romp through Greek Mythology that is often more impressive than it isn’t. Exploring the world at your leisure is very satisfying, as are the puzzles you’ll encounter nearly everywhere. The combat is fast-paced and engaging, with a variety of weapons and abilities that you’ll work towards through a pretty in-depth progression system.

Marvel's Spider-Man: Miles Morales

Marvel's Spider-Man: Miles Morales

To bridge the gap until Insomniac debuts a sequel to Peter Parker’s story from 2018’s Marvel’s Spider-Man, the developer has offered up a side-story, one centered on Miles Morales becoming his own version of Spider-Man. While the game can often look and play largely similar to what we’ve had before, Miles adds his own flair to combat, as well as a deeply personal story that dives into the heart of who Miles is, and will become.

Watch Dogs: Legion

Watch Dogs: Legion

Watch Dogs: Legion is impressive. It doesn’t always hit the mark with variety to its missions, but the gameplay itself, combined with the ability to recruit literally anyone, makes for a very engaging and sometimes unique experience. London itself is a joy to explore, an ever-sprawling location that honestly doesn’t get enough love in video games.

Clea

Clea

Left alone with your brother on your birthday, Clea ventures out into the dark hallways of her home, tasked with wondering what has happened to her parents, and her nanny, Florine. Clea is a paper-doll style horror game with stunning visuals, a decent enough story, but its gameplay is sadly not as good as it could be.

Maid of Sker

Maid of Sker

Maid of Sker is loosely based on actual events, a story made popular through author R.D. Blackmore’s 1872 novel of the same name. While the game has some fantastic audio and video work to create a moody and downright eerie atmosphere, the save system and lack of being able to hide when discovered does run counter to the pacing and feel of the game.

Cloudpunk

Cloudpunk

Cloudpunk is certainly a visually striking game, there is no doubt about that. Its colorful and neon-lit city, taking place during a dark and rainy evening, just pops out at you, begging for you to just ignore your quests and just explore. While the story and characters are more than capable of adding to this gorgeous release, there is a strong degree of repetition and poor design work that does hold the game back.

Genshin Impact

Genshin Impact

Genshin Impact is fun, and well put together, and just because you recognize some of the many pieces it’s constructed from, doesn’t discount how engaging and great the game feels, and the vast world it offers to explore. For a free to play game. the content you’re given access to is massive, allowing you to push through everything it has to offer without spending a single cent.

Mafia: Definitive Edition

Mafia: Definitive Edition

Mafia: Definitive Edition is a remake that does a lot of things right, but stumbles when it comes to being a full-blown modernization. Its rebuilt visuals and overhaul of the script, all come together to offer up a truly engaging experience. But as good as the game looks, its dated gameplay drags down the experience with a bevy of instant fail mechanics, a clunky combat system, and a lack of variety or personality to its large rebuilt world.

Hades

Hades

Hades is a blast to play from minute one, an action packed Rogue-like that rewards you constantly, and it feels like it never lets up on what you’re able to dig into. Every run is a joy, every death means I get to see my friends back at home, and then I would head back out there to push through to the end, to allow Zagreus to, well, you’ll have to see it for yourself.

Kingdoms of Amalur: Re-Reckoning

Kingdoms of Amalur: Re-Reckoning

Kingdoms of Amalur is the latest remaster from THQ Nordic. While it doesn’t have the same rebuilt visuals as some of their more recent remasters, the boosted resolution and framerate do make it the best looking version of the game. Sadly, the game is also loaded with a bevy of glitches and bugs that hurt the overall product. It’s not a terribly well crafted remaster, but the game is still as fun as its ever been.

The Suicide of Rachel Foster

The Suicide of Rachel Foster

The Suicide of Rachel Foster can certainly deal with some intense topics through its roughly 3 hour length. Nicole, a character you’ll get to know all too well, has lived with the knowledge that her father had an affair with a very young girl, a young woman who couldn’t take the pressure in her life and thus committed suicide. Or, at least, that is the official story. As Nicole heads out to the hotel once owned by her family, she’ll uncover a mystery to the truth, even if she desperately doesn’t want to know it.

Marvel's Avengers

Marvel's Avengers

While the finished game is far more functional, it’s still littered with numerous bugs, crashing at least once or twice a day for myself, and a game that is lacking in polish across the board. Now, that said, I’ve certainly found enjoyment across both its single-player campaign and its online offerings, but there are a lot of caveats that have to be addressed as the game is certainly lacking in its current form

Fairy Tail

Fairy Tail

Naruto showed us what an authentic and satisfying anime adaption can be like in video game form with Shippuden Ultimate Ninja Storm 4, a game I still consider to be one of the best anime to game adaptions so far. It captured the anime perfectly and made the action and combat feel exactly how it needed to. It’s a shame that Fairy Tail, which is just as much of an explosive and high energy series as Naruto, didn’t get this type of game.