GameSpot's Reviews
Weird West slings a few effective yarns, but fumbles when it comes to dealing in lead.
Kirby and the Forgotten Land is the biggest and most inventive entry in the long-running franchise.
Tiny Tina's Wonderlands retreads the same mechanical and narrative ground as Borderlands 3, ultimately creating a chapter in the franchise that's fun but forgettable.
Ghostwire: Tokyo's unique supernatural combat and eerily beautiful open-world paper over the cracks of its subpar story and inconsistent side missions.
Gran Turismo 7 takes all the good bits of Gran Turismo's past, shakes it up, and adds a sprinkling of car culture to sweeten the deal.
From Software's latest is a masterpiece of open-world design that places exploration and player agency at the heart of the experience.
Tunic harkens back to the 16-bit era with a challenging adventure full of discovery and wonder.
WWE 2K22 makes a surprising recovery and puts the long-running series back on track.
There's a lot of meme potential in Stranger of Paradise thanks to its willingness to be aggressively confusing, but fun, varied combat carries its most WTF moments forward.
Triangle Strategy strips away some classic genre norms while adding extra nuances of its own and a stellar, if sometimes indulgent, story.
Dawn of Ragnarök doesn't tell a compelling story, but its introduction of god-like powers creates new avenues for how players can explore and fight in Assassin's Creed Valhalla.
The puzzle/RPG hybrid returns with a sequel that focuses less on adventure and more on match-3 puzzle action.
Bungie continues to improve its shooter MMO with the best story campaign it has yet produced and a whole lot of great additional content to keep players engaged.
Creative Assembly's Total War: Warhammer 3 is a spectacular fantasy battle simulator with a flawed campaign.
Excellent combat and an engaging endgame are undercut by Lost Ark's archaic MMO quest design and emphasis on microtransactions.
Land of Screens is a short and sweet romcom experience that is ultimately too reductive to deliver its message meaningfully.
King of Fighters XV isn't revolutionary, but it's a solid, feature-laden package with personality and style.
Grapple Dog is a light, breezy mascot platformer that hooks you with precise, simple controls.
Horizon Forbidden West sometimes packs in so much that it gets in its own way, but the many well-drawn characters populating its quests keep it compelling.
Techland's undead sequel improves upon the strongest element of its predecessor, but things like story and characters drag it down.