Mutant Football League 2 on PlayStation 5 arrives like a punk-rock sequel to the arcade gridiron crown: it takes everything goofy and grotesque about its cult DNA and pumps it full of nitrous. This is not a game that ever apologizes for what it is – one moment you’re executing a textbook play-action rollout, the next you’re bribing the referee so he turns into a bomb that detonates in the end zone. The result is pure chaotic energy, a blend of sprinting, smashing, and explosive mayhem that feels like a 90s arcade alternative to the NFL games of today. It confidently rejects realism, embracing ultraviolence and parody in equal measure. Continue reading “Mutant Football League 2 review (PS5)”
Category: Games
Release roundup: Bee Simulator: The Hive, Battlefield 6 & Pipe Dream Co.
As the year winds toward its close, this week’s slate of new releases showcases how varied today’s gaming landscape has become, with family-friendly exploration, competitive shooters, and bite-sized mixed reality puzzling each carving out space in the spotlight. Bee Simulator: The Hive brings a gentle ecological adventure to PS5 with expanded systems aimed at younger audiences and casual players, while Battlefield 6’s Season 1 injects fresh urgency into its tactical firefights on PC through new modes and revised battlegrounds. Meanwhile, Pipe Dream Co. re-emerges on Quest with a mixed reality overhaul that blends classic puzzle DNA with modern hand-tracking interaction. Continue reading “Release roundup: Bee Simulator: The Hive, Battlefield 6 & Pipe Dream Co.”
Twilight Imperium – Thunder’s Edge review
Twilight Imperium’s new Thunder’s Edge expansion arrives as part of the recent refresh for the fourth edition, and it does so with a sense of ambition that feels entirely in step with the game’s reputation. Published by Fantasy Flight Games under Asmodee, it broadens a ruleset already known for its vastness and injects new layers of variation, asymmetric depth, and long-form strategic tension. It also reframes early-game pacing by introducing new incentives and optional systems, giving veteran groups a surprisingly different tempo from the moment the first strategy cards are drafted. Continue reading “Twilight Imperium – Thunder’s Edge review”
Thief VR: Legacy of Shadow review (PSVR2/Quest)
Stepping into Thief VR: Legacy of Shadow feels like opening a familiar door into a world built on stealth and secrets – only this time, that world envelops you rather than sits before you. Vertigo Games and Maze Theory have crafted a virtual-reality incarnation of the long-running Thief franchise that faithfully evokes its roots while exposing a few rough edges. As Magpie, the streetwise orphan turned thief, you slip through the atmospheric sprawl of The City, living out the core fantasy of a shadowy infiltrator. That sense of place and tactile engagement is perhaps the title’s greatest achievement; moves like picking locks, slipping through windows, and looting eyes-only treasure chests are conveyed with a physicality that flat-screen titles can never deliver. Continue reading “Thief VR: Legacy of Shadow review (PSVR2/Quest)”
She’s Leaving review (PS5)
Blue Hat Studio’s She’s Leaving arrives on PlayStation 5 as an intimate, mid-budget horror title that’s as much about creeping dread and meticulous observation as it is about fleeing the shadows. From the outset, the game’s premise – placing players in the shoes of Charles Dalton, a forensic analyst chasing clues through the mist-shrouded House Haywood – promises something distinct: a horror experience grounded less in combat and more in investigation and unease. That ambition largely succeeds in giving the game a voice of its own, though the execution oscillates between thoughtful and undercooked in equal measure. Continue reading “She’s Leaving review (PS5)”