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 Best Starter [Leafbun, Blazpup, or Bubble?]
By Adele Wilson
Grass-type, Fire-type, or Water-type?
PC Reviews
Mind’s Eye: Secrets of the Forgotten Review
By Andy Chalk
Playing Mind's Eye: Secrets of the Forgotten is a bizarre experience. I wanted to like it, I really did, and for the first hour I thought I would. It starts strong, with a grisly murder and the promise of a story that's actually going places, but after awhile it starts to spin out of control and eventually stops making any sort of sense whatsoever. In the end, all that early potential goes nowhere at all and the game, while decent, never manages to be noteworthy for anything except what might have been.Deep Blue Sea 2 Review
After working on the violent and mature themed Hitman game, two members of the development team switched gears and embarked on a journey into the casual gaming world by forming The Game Equation. Following a similar theme of change, the studio's 2008 debut Deep Blue Sea blended match-three style gameplay with a tale about an advertizing executive named Jessica who ditches her day job to become a deep sea treasure hunter. Two years of polish and hard work have made their follow-up aquatic puzzle adventure all the more impressive.Atlantis Evolution Review
Imagine an alternate reality Earth, one where our technology has become much more advanced, yet all of our time is spent serving the gods through back breaking labor. This is the setting of Atlantis Evolution. Unfortunately, while the setting is unique and refreshing, the actual game is so repetitive and filled with so many frustrating moments that it's hard to actually enjoy exploring the mythical lost city of Atlantis.Magic Encyclopedia 3: Illusions Review
By Erin Bell
After scoring a pair of hits with 2008's hidden object adventure Magic Encyclopedia: First Story and its follow-up, Magic Encyclopedia: Moon Light, Alawar isn't resting on its laurels with the third game in the series. Magic Encyclopedia 3: Illusions introduces a fresh new graphical makeover and a unique approach to seek-and-find that has you switching between two different layers (one real and one an illusion) to uncover all of the secrets a scene has to offer.Royal Envoy Review
By Chad Sapieha
It turns out the best way to make sure you're looked after in times of need is to supply your country's leader with swanky shoes. The king in Playrix's new building simulator Royal Envoy shows no interest in helping Islandshire's storm ravaged residents until he learns that they're the ones who keep him in purple slippers. Once this fact is revealed he wastes no time sending a delegate—you—to oversee the province's rebuilding and ensure production of his fancy footwear continues uninterrupted.Spectranoid Review
By Jim Squires
Video games that feature a paddle and ball aren't anything new. They're as old as the industry itself. Pong got things started back in the 70's, Breakout wasn't far behind, and in the ensuing years we've experienced everything from Arkanoid to Radial 50. So when Spectranoid brings a paddle and ball to the table, it's far from groundbreaking. What they do with that ball and paddle however, is. Spectranoid offers the kind of addictive twitch gameplay that feeds the challenge junkie in all of us.20,000 Leagues Under the Sea Review
By Lisa Cowdell
I was an English Literature major in college. I love books, especially classic novels. In fact, when I'm not playing games on my PC or iPhone in my spare time, you can usually find me curled up in a corner somewhere with my nose in a book. So, when I got the assignment to review a PC game based on one of the great literary classics, 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea by Jules Verne, I set out on my journey with high hopes and great expectations.The Mystery of the Crystal Portal: Beyond the Horizon Review
It's a good news/bad news situation in Mystery of the Crystal Portal: Beyond the Horizon. The good news is that after spending all of the first Mystery of the Crystal Portal game looking for your father, you've finally found him. The bad news is that now you're both trapped with no apparent way home.