Square Enix aims for the middle. (PC)
Browsing: Reviews by Emmanuel Brown
Seeing your unholy free kick creation spring to life in a crucial moment.
A Cryptic success?
Traveller's Tales plunders Arkham asylum for one of the best LEGO titles yet.
Much like the technology on show in Pandemic's latest open-world destructathon, Mercenaries 2 has an air of 2006 about it.
Hotly anticipated as one of the PC games to look out for in 2008, Space Siege is the latest action-RPG from Gas Powered Games...
Whilst Imperium Romanum doesn't do anything to reinvent the genre as a whole, it's certainly a well-refined product that's worth a look to veteran and first time players.
Wings of the Goddess is the fourth expansion pack to Square-Enix's widely overlooked Xbox 360 port of the PS2 and PC MMO franchise.
The Turok series has been taken over by a new publisher, Touchstone Studios. Has the new crew added some substance to the series, or is it the same old game?
In order to make The Club, you need to take one part Gears of War, add in a dash of Street Fighter, blend with a good dose of Geometry Wars, and sprinkle liberally with PGR.
The Warriors' games essentially task the player with controlling one or more of the legendary and mythical heroes from either Chinese or Japanese history.
Set almost two years after the botanical events of the first game, Obscure II opens with our scholarly chums now having embarked to University dorms.
Defcon is a deceptively simple multiplayer strategy game, the objective of which is simply to kill as much of the opposition civilian population as possible.
If you enjoy your puzzle games and like to work your brain on challenges ranging from simple to break-the-desk frustrating, then Safecracker might just be for you.
Distribution issues aside, Shadowrun is a solidly average shooter that may appeal to hardcore fans looking for something a little bit different.
Leaving the dubiously moralistic setting out of the equation, 'Whirlwind Over Vietnam' takes on a highly militaristic approach to the simulation of one of the most iconic machines ever made.
Dawn of Magic contains enough deep content and a pleasing enough approach to the genre to recommend a purchase.
If you've never had the pleasure of becoming one of the 'F.E.A.R.' squad members before, the game essentially plays out as a horror-shooter in a series of fairly bland office.
For many sports game fans, Sega's Virtua Tennis series has always marked the apex of quality and accessibility that so many lesser titles strive to achieve yet rarely manage to imitate.
Ever since the release of 'Empire Strikes Back' it seems that additional material in any franchise now has to take a darker, more sinister approach in order to be taken seriously.