Best Horror Games On Itch.io – July 2026
By Adele Wilson
Across a bounty of subgenres.Grow A Garden 2 Base Price List
By Meriel Green
What's the most valuable crop?Evomon Types Guide [Strengths, Weaknesses, Resistance]
By Adele Wilson
Your companion guide during battles.
iOS Reviews
Indie Pixel Review
By Joe Jasko
Whoever thought that a mass online mobile game about tiny pixels could be both so unique and so endearingly fun? The core of Indie Pixel plays out on a giant game board that looks like a fresh Minesweeper game, or a big sheet of graph paper like the kind you probably used in math class. Your pixel represents a single square on this grid, with a handful of other pixels being controlled by online players from around the world. You move around in the game by simply sliding your finger on the screen to move up, down, left, or right, one block at a time. And if you put in the effort to learn the ins and outs of its premise, the game quickly becomes a truly addictive representation of the way we succeed (or fail) at communicating with others.Race the Sun Review
By Andy Chalk
Race the Sun is a 3D endless racer that's as simple as it is cool: a high-intensity time trial through a life-or-death obstacle course that's easy to play, wickedly challenging, and devilishly addictive. The game puts you at the helm of an extremely fast solar-powered ship that, although it looks like it could fly, actually just skims across the surface of a strange alien world in a never-ending race against the setting sun.Echoes of the Past: The Kingdom of Despair Review
By Joe Jasko
Echoes of the Past: The Kingdom of Despair is the latest entry in an HOG adventure series whose name emphasizes its many subtle failures: mainly because it feels like we've already been there a handful of times before in the past. At the start of the game, your unnamed character is randomly browsing a bookstore one day, after being intrigued by a magic spell book that is said to be held within. Not even a minute after you get there, a young woman enters the bookstore, activates the spell book, turns into an evil witch, and transports you to her evil lair, where you'll passively try to escape and go home.Gold Diggers Review
With the success of games like Jetpack Joyride, the endless-game-with-currency-and-mini-objectives genre has become quite crowded. As with any artistic medium, when the current ideas start getting hackneyed and derivative, it's time to look underground: in this case, with a drilling machine. Gold Diggers has no half-baked frame narrative to justify what doesn't need justification. Boot up the game and you'll be drilling so fast you'll probably run into an obstacle before you realize the game has started.Terra Monsters Review
By Rob Rich
The creatures of Terra Monsters are quite numerous. The stable of close to 200 monsters to capture and train is probably the game's biggest bullet point, actually. Even bigger than the "massive open world" and "over 100 quests." Unfortunately, it's also the only bullet point that measures up.Game of Watchcraft: Spawn of Squishy Review
By Nick Tylwalk
I had a revelation the other day that if the current me went back in time and showed the eight-year old me an iPad, it would blow my mind. Unless my current self was showing my past self Game of Watchcraft: Spawn of Squishy, that is, in which case I'd probably just wonder how Clicker managed to get an LCD game so flat. In the present, it's a game that ends up both living and dying by its remarkable devotion to handheld game technology that ruled the 1980s.Telekinesis Kyle Review
By Joe Jasko
If I had telekinesis when I was Kyle's age, I think it sure would have made getting through middle school a whole heck of a lot easier! In Telekinesis Kyle, players take control of a young boy named Kyle, who gets dropped off at a secret research facility to learn how to fine-tune his telekinetic powers. However, things are not all how they seem, and soon after Kyle arrives, his new mentor Dr. Professor begins to show some questionable ulterior motives. But even with the whimsical and character-driven humor of games like Psychonauts on its side, there's too much about this puzzle-platform adventure that clatters to the floor like a loud metal crate with no kinetic energy to keep it in motion.Papers, Please Review
Papers, Please is a strange beast. On the surface, it seems most comparable to Cart Life: both games revolve around mundane and repetitive jobs that barely allow their protagonists to make ends meet. But while Cart Life utilizes sympathetic gameplay that reflects the tedium and uncertainty of living through each day in the life, Papers, Please creates a surprisingly fun time management experience for any player able to shuffle through the nightly routine of watching your virtual family slowly starve to death.