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
Mansion Run Review
By Andy Chalk
Mansion Run is a simple "endless runner" in which you play as a dapper skeleton named Bones Wellington, who must flee from a gang of ghosts while dodging haunted furniture and collecting the bones that are lying around his mansion. It'll put your reflexes to the test, but aside from a steady increase in obstacles and speed, what you see in the first 30 seconds of play is quite literally what - and all - you get.Penguins! Escape Review
Lemmings was a novel game during many a childhood, especially if you grew up in the golden age of PC gaming. It was a bizarre exercise in sending the helpless creatures to their death if you weren't quick or savvy enough to figure out an escape route. It was gleefully morbid beneath the veneer of cuteness, and offered multiple enticing layers of strategy across several different games. WildTangent's Penguins! Escape is a clone that takes the cuteness factor of Lemmings and ups the ante, by giving you hundreds of adorable little penguins marching along from a start point to an end point that you must safely get them to. It's nearly the same game, but it's adapted for iOS players and touch controls. And it's actually quite fun.Love Chronicles: Salvation Review
Wouldn't you think that a game with "Love Chronicles" in the title would have something to do with romance? Well strangely enough, the majority of Vendel Games' new hidden object adventure Love Chronicles: Salvation has nothing at all to do with Cupid's arrow, and instead focuses on some decidedly un-romantic themes. While that'll no doubt disappoint romance fans, hidden object/puzzle enthusiasts are still in for a reasonably good time.Skyward Collapse Review
By Andy Chalk
Skyward Collapse is a god game with a twist. Instead of leading your people to victory over non-believers, you lead two sets of people to a state of geopolitical equilibrium. In doing this, you must ensure that both sides are powerful enough to survive and flourish in a dangerous, mythological world, but that neither gains enough of an advantage to wipe the other out. It's an interesting idea, but it leaves something to be desired in execution.Hope: The Other Side of Adventure Review
Have you ever wondered what Princess Zelda was going through while she desperately waited for Link to come to her rescue? Maybe you have, and maybe you haven't, but I'd like to believe that if handled properly, her story could make for an interesting twist on the classic tale of the hero's journey. Unfortunately, Hope: The Other Side of Adventure takes what could have made for a groundbreaking and empowering experience, and utterly destroys it by substituting community theater-level soliloquy and angst for compelling gameplay.The Night of the Rabbit Review
Jeremiah Hazelnut is a typical twelve-year-old boy: he loves comic books, blackberry pie, and going on adventures in the woods near his home. Jerry dreams of becoming a master magician some day, and while he is old enough to question the world around him, he's youthful enough to believe in the existence of real magic. On his second to last day of summer vacation, a day when "anything is possible," Jerry's dream begins to come true.Expedition Mars Review
By Joe Jasko
I'll be honest, before I started playing Expedition Mars, I didn't know anything about the game other than its title, and the fact that it was coming from the same people behind the intriguing point-and-click adventure Hypnosis. But in a way, I feel like this lack of information actually allowed me to enjoy this engrossing point-and-click adventure all the more, as Expedition Mars turns out to be a game that's all about discovery, and making those discoveries completely on your own.Rush Bros. Review
By Mike Rose
If I told you that Rush Bros. took the platforming style of Super Meat Boy, with traps generated based on the music tracks you import into the game - plus a multiplayer mode reminiscent of Sonic 2 - then you may well jump onto the opportunity without reading the rest of this review. But that would be an unwise move, as Rush Bros. doesn't exactly deliver on its promise. There's definite potential in the level design and the focus on speed runs, but the controls simply aren't tight enough, and the music import feature is pretty flaky.