Disney Infinity review for PS3, Xbox 360, Wii U, Wii
An enjoyable and creative, if somewhat unpolished and potentially pricey, Disney gaming experience for the whole family.
Nintendo 3DS Reviews
An enjoyable and creative, if somewhat unpolished and potentially pricey, Disney gaming experience for the whole family.
SteamWorld Dig: A Fistful of Dirt is an oddly charming mix of platforming and exploration set against a robot-infused Old-West backdrop on the Nintendo 3DS eShop.
Mario & Luigi: Dream Team’s sluggish start eventually gives way to another solid adventure for the iconic Mario Bros.
Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures gets release dates, an official price and some brand new screens. Chomp ’em out. [Update: New Comic-Con trailer added]
Urban Trial Freestyle arrives on the 3DS eShop, ported over from the recent PlayStation Network release by the same name. Read the review to find out how the jump to 3DS fares for this Trials HD clone.
A worthy successor to Nocturne’s crown, Shin Megami Tensei IV marks the first follow-up in the main series by Atlus in nearly 10 years.
Project X Zone is a crossover effort of massive scale, but that same ambition doesn’t carry over to its lightweight strategy trappings.
Here’s a phrase that probably doesn’t pop up too often in reviews of download-only 3DS games: morally abhorrent.
Donkey Kong Country Returns 3D will make you fall in love with the 3DS all over again, while simultaneously making you want to smash it to pieces.
The Mario vs. Donkey Kong series hits the 3DS with Minis on the Move. Featuring a whole lot of challenging puzzles, and an intuitive level creator with online sharing, this is an eShop entry worth checking out.
LEGO City Undercover: The Chase Begins shows that portable LEGO games can be just as good as their home console brethren, with a little effort.
The SMT game you (probably) never played.
Dillon and company roll back into action on the 3DS with this tower defense action hybrid from the developers at Vanpool.
Luigi’s Mansion: Dark Moon marks a sequel that was well worth the 12 year wait. More mansions, more ghosts, and more puzzles mark a memorable romp through another solo Luigi adventure.
HarmoKnight’s unique blend of platforming and rhythm focused combat marks a pretty big departure from Game Freak’s typical offerings, but it’s an experiment that’s definitely worth checking out.
If having hundreds of hours sucked away to go kill giant monsters and make awesome sets of armor sounds like fun, then I’ve got the game for you.