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
Injustice: Gods Among Us Review
By Rob Rich
NetherRealm's DC superhero fighting game has been turning a lot of heads lately. It looks great, and by most accounts is a fun and competent brawler. As is customary, this also means a watered-down iOS release. Although that's not entirely accurate. Injustice: Gods Among Us certainly isn't as robust or complex as its console counterpart, but it's a solid hybrid of RGP, CCG, and fighting game that caters specifically to the mobile market.Fear for Sale: Nightmare Cinema Review
By John Anthony
Going out to the movies is supposed to be fun. Of course, kidnapping, locked gates, and disappearing ticket takers aren't usually a part of that experience. Fear for Sale: Nightmare Cinema paints a gorgeous picture with both images and words, setting you loose in a noir-esque world where you investigate strange goings-on at a movie theater that seems to be hungry for human souls.Mittens Review
By Joe Jasko
Contrary to my initial beliefs, Mittens is not a game about keeping your hands warm during those cold winter months. But that's probably a good thing, because the actual premise of this cutesy casual game is a lot more fun and appealing. Coming hot on the heels of the colossal success of Where's My Water? and Where's My Perry?, Disney's latest take on the physics-based puzzler is all about love, cats, and disgruntled city dwellers.Dragon Eternity Review
By Nick Tylwalk
The "mobile first" mantra has become increasingly popular when it comes to creating games that are going to end up on smartphones and tablets, but MMORPGs made specifically for those devices are still rare. Game Insight's Dragon Eternity can call itself one of the few and the proud, but while it scores high marks on the design front, it's a little too jumbled and confusing to call a complete success.WWE Presents: Rockpocalypse Review
By David Oxford
When The Rock isn't playing the role of part-time WWE Champion on Monday Night Raw, he can often be found playing other parts on various movie sets. But something strange is happening in Studio 51, and it seems everyone around has either gone missing or wants The Rock dead (or at least beaten severely). Are they rabid John Cena fans? Movie critics who think five Fast & Furious movies was enough?BADLAND Review
Badland is the debut game from Frogmind, a small studio comprised of two developers who cut their chops over at Redlynx on the deviously challenging Trials series. With a history in precision motocross, it's somewhat surprising to see the studio's first game take on a floatier style of side-scroller, more akin to Jetpack Joyride's tap to fly gameplay. But once you dive into Badland's lushly-drawn world, it's clear that Frogmind knew exactly what it was getting itself into.Mighty Dungeons Review
By Andy Chalk
Mighty Dungeons bills itself as a cross between old-school board games like Hero Quest and Warhammer Quests and videogames like Diablo and Dungeon Master, but the truth is that it's a fairly straightforward roguelike. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, and as roguelikes go it's certainly gussied up in its Friday finest, but I think it's important to establish what we're really looking at here: a top-down dungeon crawler with simple, repetitive gameplay.Vampire Legends: The True Story of Kisolova Review
The best games not only entertain, but teach us something. Actually, since the word "teach" conjures images of stuffy classrooms and boring lectures, perhaps it's better to say, "the best games are the ones that pique our interest in the real world." While hidden object game Vampire Legends: The Story of Kisolova isn't the slickest or most original game ever made, it deserves credit for pointing us toward an intriguing supernatural story rooted in real historical events.