Crow Country is a darkly meditative nod to survival horror’s past
Is it blasphemy to call a survival horror game "cozy"? Maybe so, but as I remember my game of The land of crowsthe word popped into my mind more than…
Is it blasphemy to call a survival horror game "cozy"? Maybe so, but as I remember my game of The land of crowsthe word popped into my mind more than…
Scientists have found strong evidence that some massive stars end their existence with a whimper, not a bang, and sink into a Black hole own production without the light and…
Star BladeMOVE UP Stellar Blade has received its first major patch, which adds significant new challenge content and puts an end to what was one of the weirdest controversies at…
Arrowhead's chaotic alien shooter Helldivers 2 became the PlayStation's fastest-selling game, but despite its initial success, player numbers have since declined. A look at the game's Steam charts shows a…
Zoom in / A Falcon 9 rocket launched the NROL-146 mission from California this week. SpaceX Welcome to Rocket Report Release 6.45! The most interesting news at launch this week…
Samsung's Galaxy A55 5G tops the company's more affordable A-series phone line-up, offering solid all-round specs at prices well below the flagship Galaxy S24 line. The A55 features a large…
Captured on Nintendo Switch (handheld/undocked)In a dark, futuristic world, being a superhero is forbidden. Not by the government, but by the only power in King City that matters - the…
Angle down icon An icon in the shape of an angle pointing down. Drone photo of homes in the Mid-Wilshire neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. Halbergman/Getty Images A woman leased…
I can’t compare my experience of writing a review for The Splintered Sea, the first paid expansion for the sneaky physics puzzler Besiege, to that of a sailor writing a diary facing deadly storms on the horizon. Still, if we take for granted the idea that the review is only really valuable as an insight into the player’s experience: I didn’t feel particularly good this week. Consider this: Splintered Sea is more Besiege thoughtfully applied to his already extensive toolkit. More importantly, it’s currently bringing me deep and deeply needed moments of untainted, childlike, vaguely orcish joy.
Early impressions based on the PC and mobile versions are mixed. There's no doubt that the title has potential: its character design, while doing little to distance itself from its…