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
Power Rangers Legends Review
By David Oxford
After a great showing with Power Rangers: Samurai Steel, Saban has gone back to the well for more explosive spandex-clad martial arts action with Power Rangers Legends. Unfortunately, it seems that Timmy—er, Tommy—and the rest of the Rangers have fallen down this particular well.For The Win Review
By Matt Thrower
It's easy to forget in the dazzlingly varied world of modern board gaming that for most of history, the favoured board games were all abstracts (a game which lacks a cohesive theme and places a heavy emphasis on strategy). From famous classics like Chess and Go to half-forgotten pastimes like Nine Men's Morris, they ruled the roost for thousands of years. But modern designers like the paradigm too, and the newer abstracts are starting to make the shift to iOS. Enter For the Win.Minion Master Review
By Nick Tylwalk
If there's a sweet spot for the segment of geekdom that enjoys playing games of the non-video variety, it would have to be where tabletop miniature battles meet collectible card games. BitFlip Games has come up with an ambitious way to combine the two in a virtual sense with Minion Master, a strategy game where summoned fantasy and horror beings duke it out in solo or multiplayer battles on your PC.Buddha Finger Review
By Emma Boyes
Some games are so addictive that you spend your time away from them thinking about them, possibly even dreaming about them. Buddha Finger is one of those games, and although it's not quite in the same league as classics like Tetris or Space Invaders, it's still the kind of game that will draw you in and never let you go.Grimind Review
By Dant Rambo
Like most horror games, Grimind isn't exactly rooting for you. It pits you against vicious monsters, compromises your escape attempts with tricky puzzles, and tries to creep you out with eerie sounds and minimal lighting. In theory, all these elements should work in tandem to make for an excellent experience. But in practice, they're all tarnished by the game's myriad flaws.Knights & Dragons: Rise of the Dark Prince Review
By Rob Rich
Most free-to-play games adhere to a fairly strict set of rules, and doing so tends to make them far less interesting than they could be. However, as with most other games of any genre, taking a familiar theme or idea and doing something even slightly out of the ordinary with it can make a huge difference. It's probably the reason I've been enjoying Knights & Dragons: Rise of the Dark Prince so much.Final Fantasy Airborne Brigade Review
I honestly can't explain the appeal of the Mafia Wars-style "casual text MMO," which basically uses its players' impatience as currency. It's a strange brand of freemium game that seems to draw users into any incarnation, whether it's yet another mob-builder like iMobsters, a collectible card "adventure" like Rage of Bahamut, or an only semi-related "spinoff" to a popular series, like Final Fantasy Airborne Brigade. As baffling as the genre's popularity is, I'm even more confused by this newest development: I can't stop playing Airborne Brigade.Detective Quest: The Crystal Slipper Review
By Emma Boyes
Detective Quest: The Crystal Slipper starts with a familiar story... a handsome Prince fell in love with a beautiful woman who he danced with at the royal ball. She left suddenly, without even telling him her name, and leaving behind only a crystal slipper for him to remember her by. So the Prince enlists in the help of a detective (that's you!) to help him find his fair maiden. From then onwards, the Cinderella tale takes some unfamiliar turns and becomes an original story. It comes from Elephant Games, a studio which has clearly been busy recently, having also released the excellent Christmas Stories: Nutcracker less than a month ago.