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
Sonic the Hedgehog 4: Episode II Review
By Mike Rose
Sonic is back to finish the journey he first started back in 2010, and this time he's brought along someone you may well recognize. Sonic the Hedgehog 4: Episode 2 follows up on the original episode, with the aim to hark back to Sonic gaming of the 90's while injecting this millennium's 3D coat of paint.Diablo III Review
Here at Gamezebo, we review what are usually referred to as "casual" games. Despite the fact that we're constantly looking behind the scenes for a better name to describe the emerging wave of quick and accessible videogames, a simple fact stands: the games we review a vast majority of the time are going to be in the $20 and lower price range and are aimed at a general audience. So why, you might ask, am I reviewing a full-priced hardcore sequel to a game from 2000?Circus Atari Review
By Dant Rambo
Circus Atari was released for the Atari 2600 in 1981. A port of the mid-70s arcade game Circus, it offered nothing more than slight graphical improvements. Atari recently released a game on iOS under the same name, leading myself and others to assume it was a remake of some sort. It's not. It's a different game that's "based on" the original. Pretty weird, right?Extinction Squad Review
By Dant Rambo
I've yet to encounter a developer on the App Store who gets humor the way [adult swim] does. Their willingness to take crazy concepts and run with them - sometimes literally - is something I can't praise enough. Extinction Squad, arguably their most ridiculous game yet, finds the studio venturing even further down the proverbial rabbit hole. Is there no end to this (wonderful) madness?The Sandbox Review
By Nadia Oxford
Have you ever thought about how the world might be a sandbox, and God might be a kid just playing in it? That's, like, deep and stuff. It would explain the chaos that envelopes life at every moment, and we'd also have an answer for all the cat poop lying around. The Sandbox for iOS lets you muck around in your own digital universe, and heaven help whatever life form moves into your world of oil, steel, and fire.The Journey Down: Chapter One Review
By Jim Squires
As an adventure game, The Journey Down: Chapter One hits all the right notes. It has plenty of charm and character, a mysterious story, an unlikely hero that gets wrapped up in things he doesn't understand, and puzzles that offer a perfect level of challenge, delivering a deeply satisfying "a-ha!" moment when solved. Oh - and did we mention that the game wraps all of this up in a uniquely African aesthetic?KOTOMON Review
By Eli Cymet
When Kotomon hit the App Store, I literally jumped at the chance to review it. And if I didn't, you certainly can't prove otherwise. A game boasting dancing, monsters, and shooting from key members behind Q Entertainment's iconic titles Rez and Lumines? Where do I sign up!? Yet our fearless Editor-in-Chief Jim was a little skeptical: "I've come to realize that 'from the makers of...' always spells disaster on iOS." Oh well, what does he know? I thought, hitting "buy." A lot, as it turns out.Dark Alleys: Penumbra Motel Review
It's unusual for expert adventure game makers ERS Game Studios to stumble. The company's a well-oiled machine, cranking out top-selling hidden object adventures at an unbelievable rate. Perhaps it's speed that's to blame for the so-so success of its latest adventure, Dark Alleys: Penumbra Motel. Whatever the reason, this title, though exhibiting all the quality ingredients of an ERS production, never really comes together. In the end it does little justice to the ERS name.