Best Horror Games On Itch.io – July 2026
By Adele Wilson
Across a bounty of subgenres.Haze Seas Accessories Tier List [Best Accessories to Equip]
By Adele Wilson
The accessories with the best stat buffs in Haze Seas.
iOS Reviews
Guardian Cross Review
By Nick Tylwalk
Except for a few big ones that don't need to be named, card battle games usually appeal to a niche audience. Guardian Cross has a few good reasons to think bigger, though: It's from Square Enix, it has creative talent from several Final Fantasy games behind it, and it's free. It also sounds like it was named by randomly combining two words from some of the company's past games, but we'll let that slide.Lili Review
By Eli Cymet
Lili is all about discovery. It opens with its titular protagonist making an unexpected one: that the island to which she's traveling in search of rare flowers is inhabited by a race of living wooden "Constructs." Gameplay, however, gives way to a much more unfortunate revelation: that not all that glitters is gold, and that lots of polish an adventure does not make.The Chronicles of Emerland Solitaire Review
By Brandy Shaul
The Chronicles of Emerland Solitaire is the latest in a growing group of games in the pyramid solitaire genre. But where others simply have you removing cards from templates at the top of the screen, Chronicles of Emerland throws in hidden object scenes for depth. The game's soothing music and lovely graphics offer a relaxing setup for card game play, but the game, like so many others in the genre, ultimately relies more on luck than skill.Rail Rush Review
The endless runner: #1 on the list of "game genres I never want to recreate in real life." Thanks to Temple Run's disarming level of popularity, players can now enjoy this nightmarish genre in almost any setting imaginable, from the cookie-cutter (literally) Ginger Run to the high espionage of Agent Dash. Miniclip's latest release, Rail Rush, sends us to an underground mine where gold, lava, and three infinitely long sets of railroad tracks await.The Agency of Anomalies: The Last Performance Review
By Nadia Oxford
The Agency of Anomalies: The Last Performance is a hidden-object game that's centered around freaks, monsters, and show business. It sounds like corny county fair stuff, though your experience with The Last Performance will probably feel more authentic than the time you paid a carnival barker $5 to gawk at what turned out to be a shaved goat. In fact, The Last Performance is a genuinely unsettling and engaging game. It won't keep you up with nightmares, but neither will you easily forget making the acquaintance of a man with a snake's body.Pakkuman’s Defense Review
By Eli Cymet
The grand illusion of retro games that few - including myself, very often - are willing to admit is that many of them were...bad. What are reflected on fondly as punishing, take-no-prisoners design choices were more accurately technical limitations, and more often, worse: calculated difficult spikes meant to keep butts in seats, and quarters flowing. So when I saw that indie developer Ido Yehieli (Tametick) had revisited Pac-Man to give it a little sprucing up, I wasn't indignant: I was excited.Bubble Pirate Quest Review
By Leif Johnson
Another day, another bubble shooter. The newest contender in the ring is Murzik's Bubble Pirate Quest, which takes the usual bubble shooter formula and wraps it up in a colorful pirate-themed setting. It's fun enough (as are most puzzle shooters), it makes no major stumbles in the core gameplay, and it's even been released in a mobile version over the last few days. The only problem is that it's so much like the other bubble shooters we've played that it's hard to justify dumping your other favorite bubble shooter for it.My Dragon Review
By Matt Thrower
My Dragon is a new freemium app from Glu games that allows children to take care of their very own pet dragon and take it on quests and adventures in the Kingdom of Dragonia. Given the chance, who wouldn't want to have their own pet dragon? My kids did, and between you and me, so did I.