The world of Back to Bed is uncanny yet familiar. Anyone who has seen a work of art by Salvador Dalí or René Magritte should immediately recognize some of its decorative and interactive objects: plump green apples, disembodied floating eyeballs, …
Most endless runners are easy to play and difficult to master, but Alone flips the switch: it has a steep learning curve (for an endless runner), but once you’ve mastered it, flying through caverns, comets, and meteorites is a breeze. …
What happens in Vegas ends up all over Bitbook. Tiny Tower Vegas, NimbleBit’s latest tower-builder, lets you build a skyscraper of sin that stretches into the heavens. Presumably, if you get high enough, you can fire an arrow into God’s …
Everything comes around again – I studied math in college, yet here I am, reviewing a game about math. Thankfully, Sumico is far more entertaining to play around with than most of my college math courses. In Sumico, numbers on …
Sometimes the experience of a game hits you in a way that you don’t quite expect it to. Episodic games are iffy with me, often because their first parts can feel like incomplete prologues. Light Apprentice Volume 1 is a …
At the opening of Deep Under the Sky, the game presents players with an interesting tidbit of information: the dark side of Venus faintly glows, and no one knows why. Seeing as how it is my job to know why …
Star Realms made its promising start as a tabletop deck-building card game that amassed a startling amount of popularity. Its digital adaptation is an excellent representation of what makes it such an awesome game to pick up and play. While …
You can’t be blamed for approaching WWE SuperCard warily. It’s a card-battling game about a major corporation that’s published by another major corporation (2K Games). Moreover, it’s free. If you’re savvy to how big-name free-to-play games tend to work, you’re likely …