Psychological horror games often aim to unsettle, but Luto goes a step further by plunging the player into the depths of grief and mental illness. From the very beginning, its slow, deliberate pace reinforces the weight of the emotional trauma it attempts to convey – you’re not just trapped in a house, you’re trapped in your own mind. With clear influences from P.T., this Spanish indie project manages to carve out its own space in the genre, though not without some limitations. Continue reading “Luto review (PS5/Xbox)”
Category: New
RoboCop: Rogue City – Unfinished Business review (PS5)
RoboCop: Rogue City – Unfinished Business feels like a natural extension of last year’s surprisingly successful RoboCop game, and for the most part, it delivers another satisfying slice of violent justice. This standalone expansion picks up right after the main campaign ends, and though it doesn’t offer anything revolutionary, it sticks to the formula that worked before while giving players a fresh setting, a few new tricks, and more time in the titanium boots of Peter Weller’s iconic cyber-cop. Continue reading “RoboCop: Rogue City – Unfinished Business review (PS5)”
The Wandering Village review (PS5)
Although the city-builder genre is packed with entries, The Wandering Village manages to carve out a unique niche for itself by blending colony management with survival gameplay on the back of a giant creature. Developed and published by Stray Fawn Studio, the PlayStation 5 version of this title brings a slower, more deliberate rhythm to console players – one that’s deeply satisfying but not without its rough patches. Continue reading “The Wandering Village review (PS5)”
Ready or Not review (PS5)
VOID Interactive’s Ready or Not has made its way to consoles after a lengthy early access period on PC, delivering a deeply tactical FPS experience rooted in the procedural reality of SWAT deployments. With a new-gen release on PlayStation 5, the game now reaches a broader audience – and it does so with most of its ambitions intact, even if a few of its edges remain rough. Continue reading “Ready or Not review (PS5)”
No Sleep For Kaname Date: From AI THE SOMNIUM FILES REVIEW (Switch)
Though billed as a short side story, No Sleep For Kaname Date still leans fully into the signature blend of absurdity, mystery, and sci-fi surrealism that made AI: The Somnium Files such a cult hit. It’s an offbeat adventure that reintroduces players to the charismatic Kaname Date, now once again at the centre of a strange and twisting case involving idols, alien abductions, and bizarre dreamscapes. Iris has gone missing under suspiciously extraterrestrial circumstances, and what follows is a condensed but still engaging investigation that blends grounded logic with dream logic. Continue reading “No Sleep For Kaname Date: From AI THE SOMNIUM FILES REVIEW (Switch)”