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
Flora’s Fruit Farm Review
By Erin Bell
Kindness does pay - just ask Flora. She's exploring her new orchard when she meets an old man and helps him load fruit onto his cart. In return, the mysterious man gives her a magnificent gift: a pair of magical gloves that let her grow fruit trees with the touch of a finger. It's your job to get the orchard buzzing again in Flora's Fruit Farm, a new time management game published by Eidos and developed by Honeyslug.Kitchen Brigade Review
By David Stone
Sometimes I wish that I lived in the Land of Casual Games. If I did, there would be a ridiculous number of restaurants, each serving the best quality foods they could muster while I stood there at the counter, hearts ticking away. If I could choose a restaurant to go to, Kitchen Brigade would be high on that list. In Kitchen Brigade you are a young, aspiring chef (are there any other kinds?) who just won a big cooking competition. Unfortunately, after taxes, tuition from cooking school and buying your own place, you're left with the shirt on your back and big dreams. But, not long after opening your restaurant, you're invited to join the Kitchen Brigade game show.Sally’s Quick Clips Review
Sally's Quick Clips is a fast paced match-3 game that has you gathering resources to serve beauty salon clients. The game takes place before the events of Sally's Salon and Sally's Spa, although the gameplay mechanics are very different. With a series of successful salons and spas behind her, Sally has the urge to remember her roots. It all started when she had just gotten her beauty degree, and decided to compete on a game show called Styling America. As you play through her flashbacks, you learn how she got her first big break.Gemini Lost Review
If you're roaming around and happen to see a giant, ominous shaft of light appear emanating from far off in the distance, the general rule of thumb is to steer clear. While ignoring this seemingly obvious safety precaution does not bode particularly well for the gaggle of curious townspeople in Gemini Lost, such foolishness is entertaining and rewarding for the omniscient overseer who invisibly influences them in their daily routines. That's you, by the way.All the trouble starts when a gaggle of youth (conveniently made up of three guys and three gals) first stumble upon an unexpected solar eclipse and then witness an even stranger occurrence where the eclipse lines-up with the Gemini constellation.Save Our Spirit Review
Looking for the Next Big Thing in hidden object games (HOGs)? Save Our Spirit isn't it. While this new casual game provides a lot of challenging game-play, it's also a frustrating experience due to tricky (and sometimes unfair) puzzles and other shortcomings. As a result, what could have been a highly-polished and deep HOG ends up as a mediocre experience that's not really worth your time or money.Lost City of Z Review
Nearly a hundred years ago, Colonel Fawcett set out on an expedition to locate the famed Lost City of Z. Your sister, who was trying to follow the Colonel's trail through the jungle, has also gone missing. Your mission in the hidden object game Lost City of Z is to find her, but be prepared - your journey won't be an easy one.Travel League: The Missing Jewels Review
By Chad Sapieha
These days, hidden object games tend to fall into two categories: those that make a valiant effort to innovate within a genre that has already been thoroughly explored, and those that come off as a little more than an attempt to cash in on our obsession to search for stuff in crowded pictures. Travel League: The Missing Jewels is, unfortunately, a member of the latter group. Players take on the role of Alex, a young woman enlisted to help find the stolen jewels of an ancient and mysterious group known as the Travel League, of which her grandfather is a longtime member. She travels to cities around the globe, talking to locals who provide information on what has happened to each piece.The Shivah Review
By David Stone
When a game comes along that features a rabbi as the lead character, you can't help but do a double-take. In The Shivah, a point-and-click adventure game from Wadjet Eye Games, that's just what you'll do.You play as Rabbi Russell Stone, a man whose faith is dwindling almost as fast as his congregation. One evening after services, Stone is visited by a policeman, who tells him that a former member of his synagogue, Jack Lauder, has been killed. Apparently, Lauder left Stone a large sum of money, but Stone doesn't understand why Lauder would have left anything to him after the falling out they had years ago. Thus begins the mystery.