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
The Blockheads Review
By Eli Cymet
In an App Store rife with cloning, "Minecraft-style" has essentially become its own subgenre. A quick Google search alone reveals an almost monthly article about the latest attempt by an enterprising studio to bottle the lightning Mojang captured with their "Lego in a Sandbox" phenomenon. It's no surprise, then, that I dove into Majic Jungle Software's The Blockheads with considerable skepticism. What is surprising, however, is how much fun I had.Amazing Ants Review
By David Oxford
Amazing Ants reminds us a bit of the game Lemmings: You tap the ants on the screen to get them moving, and they don't stop until they reach their goal. Along the way, you can use different items, obstacles, and abilities to help see them through their goal of collecting all the fruit in each area and proceeding to the exit in an orderly fashion.Dark Tales: Edgar Allan Poe’s The Gold Bug Review
As a whole, the hidden object genre tends to rely largely on motifs of mystery. It should come as no surprise, then, that developer ERS Game Studios has a series of HOGs based off of the stories of Edgar Allen Poe. These adventures see you, the detective, aiding Poe's recurring sleuth staple Dupin, the protagonist of some of the books in which these games are based, but who never actually appears in The Gold Bug.Take My Machete Review
By Mike Rose
The funny thing about aliens is that we, the human race, have come up with this idea of what they look like, based on absolutely no evidence whatsoever - merely a concept passed through the ages. You can imagine that if we finally do meet beings from another place, they're going to catch us completely off guard by looking nothing like what we thought they would.Steam Age Review
By Rob Rich
I've begun to notice certain frameworks within many free-to-play games that almost function as a set of game design sub-genres. The reason I'm bringing this up is because I know I've played a game very much like Steam Age before, only it wasn't thoroughly soaked in steampunk. I like steampunk.Underground Kingdom Review
By Jim Squires
While digital interactive fiction is on the rise nowadays, sometimes we forget that it all started with the printed word. The Choose Your Own Adventure series kicked off back in 1979, introducing millions of children to the fun and excitement of controlling the stories they read. And when that series kicked off, it kicked off with a book by series creator Edward Packard.Tribloos 2 Review
By Brandy Shaul
Since the launch of The Tribloos back in 2011, dozens of time management games have been released that tend to focus on a different layout, giving The Tribloos 2 a feeling of freshness, even if it is a sequel. We're back once more to help our furry friends repair their home after a series of storms, and the gameplay here is just as fun as it was the first time around.Ruzzle Review
Mobile platforms are perfect for asynchronous multiplayer word games. Ruzzle is a prime example of how to correctly approach one of these titles. The Boggle-inspired gameplay doesn't stand out from its peers, nor does it have much in the way of features. Despite the drawbacks, Ruzzle uses this simplicity to its advantage and provides an enjoyable, albeit forgettable, competitive word game.