Headphones Review Round Up [Hardware]: SIVGA SV021, VR500, UX3000, and VR2000
By Simon Reed
Update: SIVGA SV021 tested and rated!Boulies Elite Max Chair [Hardware] Review – Assemble, Adjust, Relax
By Adele Wilson
What do we think of the Boulies Elite Max Chair?Red Magic 9S Pro [Hardware] Review – The New Standard For Mobile Gaming?
By Sho Roberts
My Red Magic 9S Pro Review puts this incredible bit of tech through its paces to determine whether it's worth your money.
Category: Reviews
Star Wars Force Collection Review
By Andy Chalk
Star Wars Force Collection is yet another addition to the crowded and bafflingly popular collectible card battle game genre that's entirely unremarkable save for one thing: it serves up a very impressive multimedia overload of all things Star Wars. If you've been looking for a CCG that really caters to your jones for a galaxy far, far away, then now, my friend, is the time to jump in.BRAVOMAN: Binja Bash! Review
By David Oxford
Bravoman is a Namco Bandai character from the days of the TurboGrafx-16, who is celebrating his 25th anniversary and has recently become the star of his own popular ShiftyLook web comic and cartoon series, the latter of which has cast Rob Paulsen of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Animaniacs fame (among others) in numerous roles. With all of this behind him, a brand new video game seems like a surefire thing, right? Unfortunately, despite these pedigrees, Bravoman: Binja Bash! fails to deliver in the ways that the character has in other media. Which is all the more ironic, when you consider the fact that he began as a video game character in the first place.Monster Match Review
By Rob Rich
Games like Puzzle & Dragons - both those that came before and came after - have done a decent job of filling the App Store lately. So much so that something like Monster Match stands out not because it's necessarily better, but because it does something different. Granted I do think it's better, but seeing something break out of the mold even a little bit makes me incredibly happy.Junk Jack X Review
By Mike Rose
You know how sometimes games can just be so open-ended and freedom-filled, that some players find the content and possibilities on offer more than a little daunting? This was the case with the original Junk Jack, a lovely Terraria-like experience for mobile that had quite the steep learning curve.The Raven: Episode 2 – Ancestry of Lies Review
By Andy Chalk
The Raven - Legacy of a Master Thief: Episode 2 - Ancestry of Lies has arrived - and The Raven is unmasked! This is a big chapter, folks, with lots of secrets revealed and some surprising twists and turns, but it's also something of a letdown compared to the first part, as it lacks a little bit of the quirky charm and a lot of the characters that made the opening act so much fun.Monster Legends Review
By Nick Tylwalk
Some reviews are almost impossible to do without making direct references to other games. Monster Legends is one of those, as the free-to-play Facebook game owes more than a little debt of gratitude to a certain Nintendo-backed IP that starts with a 'P.' The difference is you'll be breeding your own monsters instead of catching them, and while it's not the kind of game that's going to have mass appeal, it's enjoyable enough for what it is.Treasure Epic Review
By Nadia Oxford
Treasure Epic is a Facebook-based tile-matching game that revolves around hunting for priceless treasures. Treasure hunting is cool, but Treasure Epic's actual gameplay is typical of a Facebook title: common as dirt. It's not a poor game by any means, but it's less like gold jewelry and more like the brass-plated trinkets that line your Auntie Etta's shelves. It's fun to poke at, but you're already familiar with all of the dust-packed nooks and crannies.Tiny Missiles Review
By Alex De Vore
Remember Fruit Ninja? That game where you slice through flying fruit with an invisible katana blade? Of course you do, it's barely even a few years old. Well do you know who else remembers that game? Indie developer Absurdly Logical Solutions, that's who. In fact, the fine people who also brought what was basically a re-skinned Angry Birds with Fire the Cannon remember it so well that they've gone so far as to recreate it with Tiny Missiles, a game that puts—you guessed it—missiles in place of sword swipes.