An excellent and expansive campaign and stellar multiplayer offerings make for one of Halo's best instalments to date.
An expansion clearly made for fans of the base game - and basically nobody else.
Like a boundary off of a leading edge, Cricket 22 takes you where you need to go- but not how you would want it to.
Century: Age of Ashes mostly makes up for its same-y maps and boring cosmetics with great modes, gameplay, and progression.
Fishlabs' Chorus is one of the most enjoyable space shooters I've played in quite some time.
Aiko’s Choice is essentially more of the same, and that’s just fine.
Heart Machine's black hole odyssey is full of mysteries, gorgeous visuals and solid gameplay even with its share of drawbacks.
MXGP 2021 is just more of the same.
A sequel that was mostly worth the almost 30 year long wait.
Though not quite as intense as its setting might suggest, Surviving the Aftermath is still an addictive management sim.
Pokemon Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl are the best Pokemon games on the Switch so far.
The newest edition of Skyrim adds just enough to entice the few that have yet to play it, or perhaps missed the 8th gen version, but stops short of much else.
Battlefield 2042 hits on some of its huge potential, misses on the rest.
Frontier Developments delivers a solid sequel that builds upon its predecessor's foundations in all the right ways.
Frogwares' Sherlock Holmes: Chapter One teeter-totters between being an okay game and an excessively padded out adventure.
Three classic games are brought to modern consoles with visual and QoL improvements, but the end result falls short of expectations.
Bright Memory Infinite borrows some of the better ideas from modern first-person shooters and combines them with its own flashy identity to great effect.
A vacation getaway within a vacation getaway.
Sports Interactive delivers yet another excellent football management sim, surprising no one.
The Call of Duty formula’s most familiar entry does it well.