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
Chuck the Muck Review
By Joe Jasko
Chuck the Muck is the latest in line of fun and quirky games in the Planet Muck universe, right behind last year's well-received action-oriented Critter Escape. This time around, one of those lovable critters has teamed up with a big muck named Chuck for a head-scratching, physics-based good time. So how do our critter pal and his new friend Chuck hold up in a puzzle-platform environment?Castle: Never Judge a Book by Its Cover Review
By Brandy Shaul
The television drama Castle follows novel writer Richard Castle in his adventures with detective Kate Beckett, using his skills as a novelist to help solve every case that comes along. Now, fans of the television show can help Castle solve his next case in Castle: Never Judge a Book by Its Cover, a new hidden object puzzle game that's actually really entertaining, even if you've never watched the show.Laboratz Review
On my list of "most wanted, never gonna happen" games, a standalone, licensed version of Triple Triad is right at the top. The brilliance of this card-battling mini-game from Squaresoft's 1999 Final Fantasy VIII is the one thing fans and non-fans can agree on when not trading blows over the Junction system. While Square Enix refuses to take our money and create this instant bestseller, other developers are tweaking the idea of Triple Triad and attempting to cash in—sometimes literally, as is the case with Laboratz.Mosaique Review
It may look like one of the now-ubiquitous minimalist iPhone weather apps, but Mosaique is more like the love child of Lumines and Echochrome than another reinvention of the thermometer. Beautiful in its simplicity, simple in its design, and satisfying in its gameplay, Mosaique checks all the boxes of a great puzzle game by being the essence of them.Tasty Tadpoles Review
By John Anthony
Tadpoles may not look tasty to humans, but to everything that lives in the pond they might as well be chocolate cake. Tasty Tadpoles is a clever little arcade game by Mark White that is one of the most pleasantly simple iOS games around. And despite the name, we're pretty sure no tadpoles are actually harmed during the game, despite being eaten over and over again.Survivalcraft Review
By Mike Rose
It can be very easy to shout "clone!" and refuse to play a game based on the fact that its screenshots and general outline appear to be copied directly from another video game. Sometimes, however, a game heavily inspired by another can bring some great, unique ideas to the surface that really make us question the original concept.Wizard Ops Tactics Review
By Rob Rich
It seems like asynchronous strategy games have been getting more and more popular on iOS lately. It's a trend I'm rather happy with since I happen to enjoy the sub-genre, but as with most surges in popularity, it has its drawbacks. Mostly, it's that the glut of releases crowds the market, making it difficult to pick out the truly worthwhile examples. Sadly, Wizard Ops Tactics doesn't stand out from that crowd.Kingdom Knights Review
By Leif Johnson
Surely no genre has weathered the ups and downs of Facebook gaming quite like the city building strategy hybrid. Just when we as players think it's dead or that we've seen every possible variation of the template we could possibly see - boom - it returns to mock us for our lack of faith. Its resilience likely lies in the fact that these games are just so fun when all the elements work. Take Kingdom Knights. I jumped into this cartoony strategy game with apathy, but before I knew it, an hour had passed and I was still eager to see where it'd take me.