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
Rivals for Catan Review
By Matt Thrower
The Settlers of Catan revolutionised board gaming when the world discovered what was originally a German family game in the mid- to late- nineties. But its model of shrewd trading and racing to grow in a limited space didn't work with two players. So a card version was released to fill that gap, recently re-released as Rivals for Catan and now released again for iOS.Wartune Review
By Leif Johnson
Thirty minutes into Wartune and my thoughts aren't on my character or the world around me. Instead, they're centered on this: how on earth has a game like this existed for so long without drawing the ire of Blizzard Entertainment? Bullish humanoids in vaguely Native American-garb called "Taurens" stomp around menacing the countryside, and globules signifying your health and mana appear lifted pixel by pixel from the Diablo series. It's a good thing that Wartune is kind of fun, or it'd be easy to dismiss it as a cheap knockoff of better titles.Dracula 4: The Shadow of the Dragon Review
By John Anthony
Just because the name "Dracula" is in the title, don't discount Dracula 4: The Shadow of the Dragon as some hokey vampire game. Created by Microids, a studio with an impressive pedigree of adventure games under its belt like Dracula 3: The Path of the Dragon and the Syberia series, this is an adventure for true adventure fans, complete with a well-told story and fantastic puzzles.Daily Collage Review
By Brandy Shaul
The hidden object genre has started to pick up steam on iOS, as developers are translating the free-to-play Facebook formula of games like Hidden Chronicles or Criminal Case into mobile experiences. These simpler, typically easier games tend to provide a great hit of hidden object gameplay while on the go, but unfortunately, the platform's newest offering, Daily Collage, misses the mark every step of the way.Icebreaker: A Viking Voyage Review
By Nadia Oxford
They come from the land of the ice and snow, from the midnight sun where the hot springs flow. Icebreaker: A Viking Voyage is a refreshing puzzle/physics game that reminds us of the hazards the mighty Viking warriors stood up to during their exploits: ice, freezing winds, evil magic, and troll boogers.Gunpoint Review
By Mike Rose
You might imagine that Gunpoint is a game about shooting things, given its name - but that's actually far from the truth. In fact, the game only gives you a gun around three-quarters of the way into play, and if you do choose to shoot someone, the situation can go completely downhill from that moment.Solstice Arena Review
By Nick Tylwalk
More than one MOBA released over the past year or two has carried claims that it was accessible, that it finally figured out how to deal with the intimidation factor that can scare away newcomers to the genre. Solstice Arena from Zynga actually backs up that talk, keeping the essential details longtime MOBA fans expect while streamlining things for the uninitiated - and also to fit into the mobile environment. Can it make believers out of hardcore players and noobs alike?Magrunner: Dark Pulse Review
By Andy Chalk
I have no idea what led the developers at Frogwares to come up with the idea for Magrunner: Dark Pulse, a first-person puzzler that blends high-tech sci-fi gameplay with the interdimensional horrors of the Cthulhu mythos, but I have happy news for gamers who were hopeful that it would live up to its promise: it's not perfect, but it's pretty good stuff.