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
Amazing Alex Review
By Eli Cymet
Amazing Alex is a dark, macabre story. One day, Casey from Casey's Contraptions simply disappears without a word. His family is worried sick. They search everywhere, fearing the worst. Suddenly, they find him on the side of the road! Except it isn't him, is it? He's unharmed and innocent, to be sure. And happy. A little too happy. Like Casey though, he gets right back to tinkering with toys and home brewing elaborate machines, building more than ever. All with a hollow, dead-eyed smile on his face. What happened to their son!?Delicious – Emily’s Wonder Wedding Review
By Nadia Oxford
Question: What's more stressful than a wedding? Answer: a borderline evil mother-in-law who looms over said wedding. And what's worse than that mother-in-law? Answer: a wedding mixed with an overbearing mother-in-law, and then topped with Irish superstition. Emily's Wonder Wedding tells a drama-filled story about a young Irish-American girl whose upcoming wedding is seemingly doomed by pushy relatives, bad luck, a conflicted groom, and the shadow of an ex-girlfriend. Oh, yeah, and there's a time management game in there somewhere, too.Pocket Heroes Review
Playing an RPG for the Super Nintendo with friends was always a complicated experience. The kid that owned the game always donned the controller, while you played the role of spectator. As your friend progressed through the game, casted formidable spells, and sleuthed through several dungeons, you finally mustered up the courage to ask for a turn. The only problem was, once you finally did get a chance to play, your friend had been playing so long that you had no idea what you were doing.Super Knights Review
Ever play an arcade-style app and find yourself getting "in the zone"? The best mechanics have a way of pulling you in - all that matters is getting that next high-score or mission complete. Gameplay feels like second nature, and you slowly regress into a hypnosis-like state as you continue to drain hours of your life away. It's like you can't st …Howlville: The Dark Past Review
On first glance, Howlville: The Dark Secret is perfectly packaged to imitate its long line of Collector's Edition ancestors who've thrilled audiences with their haunted houses, car crashes, and mysterious towns—or at least bombarded them into a numb acceptance of commercial standards. But from the title screen forward, Howlville distinguishes itself from the gloomy flock with a unique twist on the tried-and-true gameplay of hidden-object games. Instead of puzzles and hidden objects existing as separate entities; they've nested puzzles and tons of interaction into each hidden-object scenes, creating a very different pace and strategy for familiar mechanics.Grim Facade: Sinister Obsession Review
By Brandy Shaul
Arguably the most overdone plotline within the hidden object genre is that of murder and mystery, as we all-too-often take on the role of a detective, psychic or even concerned family member, out to find the truth before each game's few survivors can be picked off one by one. Such is the case with Grim Façade: Sinister Obsession, as we'll once again become a detective, charged with discovering evidence surrounding a series of murders. But here, the gameplay has enough unique twists and originality that you won't even mind the lackluster, clichéd storyline.MapleStory Live Review
By Nick Tylwalk
In the words of the great American philosopher LL Cool J, MapleStory has been something like a phenomenon, especially in Asia. Developer and publisher Nexon is hoping to add another chapter to its nearly decade-long success story with MapleStory Live for iOS devices. This freemium side-scroller isn't an MMO, but it incorporates enough of the series' familiar gameplay and feel that fans will no doubt want to give it a go.Heroes in Time Review
By Nick Tylwalk
It's easy to romanticize the past too much, especially when it comes to video games, but sometimes the games in question really were as cool as we remember them. Case in point: RPGs, circa the 16-bit console era. The new freemium iOS RPG Heroes in Time does a pretty great job of recapturing some of that magic in portable form, taking players back to when fantasies were final and, um, chronos were triggered?