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.
PC Reviews
Mary Kay Andrews: The Fixer Upper Review
Mary Kay Andrews: The Fixer Upper is a perfect example of a hidden object game that's phoning it in. On paper, it has everything it's supposed to: plenty of items to find, between-level mini-games, decent graphics and a fully-realized story. In practice, however, it's a lifeless drudge of a game that's unrewarding, unsatisfying, and completely devoid of charm.Defend and Defeat: Kingdoms Review
By Chad Sapieha
Defend and Defeat: Kingdoms puts players in the shoes of a noble who is trying to conquer and reunite the land after an inexperienced teenage couple thrust into the roles of king and queen let it fall to chaos. That's about all the story we're provided in this humdrum medieval-themed strategy affair from Pigdog Games before being thrust into a series of 17 missions, each of which involves building up a town from scratch, defending it from enemies, and satisfying a series of objectives.Youda Legend: The Golden Bird of Paradise Review
By Andy Chalk
Playing Youda Legend: The Golden Bird of Paradise, the second game in the Youda Legend series, is like driving a Chevy Malibu: It's competently built, reasonably reliable and comes with all the usual hidden object game options. But if you're looking for anything more than that, like soft Corinthian leather or any sense of style and excitement, you're in for a disappointment.Nat Geo Adventures: Ghost Fleet Review
Fiona Powell's father has been exploring the oceans for 25 years when he goes missing somewhere off the North Carolina coast. In Nat Geo Adventure: Ghost Fleet, Fiona sets out to work with her father's crew to track him down through the information available at the shipwreck sites. This latest foray into hidden object games from National Geographic shows slight improvement over its previous attempts in Nat Geo Games: Mystery of Cleopatra and Lost City of Z.The Mirror Mysteries Review
I know you're supposed to be siding with the mom, and not the creepy talking mirror in hidden object game The Mirror Mysteries, because he's trapped her children behind his glass. But he did it after they broke several other mirrors, so you can kind of see why he's peeved, and his offer to return the children if the broken mirrors are restored seems more than fair. Ok, he does make a few threats here and there, but hey, who hasn't?Great Adventures: Lost in Mountains Review
By Erin Bell
Great Adventures: Lost in Mountains is a bit hard to classify. It's not as deep as a sim game, nor as hectic as a time management game, but there's no denying that the cheerful aesthetic and likeable characters lend the game a certain appeal in spite of the fact that it has little to no long-term replay value. In Great Adventures you control two characters: a woman who's smart, nimble and good at crawling through small spaces, and a man (presumably her husband) whose talents include fixing mechanical gadgets and moving heavy objects. Alternating between the two characters is the key to solving the various situations and puzzles that the game throws at you.Dream Cars Review
The first thing that tends to come to mind when the topic of auto shops, fancy cars, and mechanics comes up is the stereotypical image of greasy dudes in grimy overalls with their noses buried under the hood of a hot rod. The fact Dream Cars instead stars two sisters whose entrepreneurial spirit and love of fast cars, racing, and building street machines from spare parts rivals that of even the most testosterone-addled motor enthusiast is incredibly refreshing.The Fall Trilogy – Chapter 1: Separation Review
One of the major drawbacks of point-and-click adventure games is that the obtuse puzzles can often be frustrating. It's easy to get stuck, which can put a damper on the things the genre does well: namely telling great stories with great visuals. With the first chapter in its trilogy The Fall, Kheops Studio attempts to remove much of this frustration and create a game that is more accommodating to new players. And while this makes things a bit too easy at times, The Fall - Chapter 1: Separation is also a solid entry in what looks to be a promising new adventure series.