Fall of Porcupine is an adorable game where you play as Finley, an anthropomorphic pigeon and new doctor. Unfortunately, the abrupt ending (or lack thereof) really spoils an otherwise charming and delightful game.
Read MoreReview: This Bed We Made
Clean hotel rooms and snoop to your heart’s content. Just don’t get arrested for murder. Short, cinematic, and close to flawless.
Read MoreReview: The Painscreek Killings
The Painscreek Killings is a walking-simulator mystery game where you play as a journalist investigating a murder in a small, now abandoned town. The game aspires to replicate the experience of solving a real murder by depriving you of all the in-game hints you may be used to.
Read MoreReview: Strange Horticulture
If you enjoy puzzles, organizing, and mysteries, Strange Horticulture was made just for you. In this game, you’ll find, identify, and organize plants, and also solve a murder?
Read MoreReview: Stray
Stray masterfully utilizes the natural behaviors and limitations of being a cat in its mechanics. The unique puzzles are then combined with whimsical characters and light-hearted dialogue to create a truly joyful experience
Read MoreReview: Backbone
Backbone is a noir adventure game where you play as Howard, a raccoon PI in a world with the gritty atmosphere of Disco Elysium and the anthropomorphic cast of Night in the Woods. This game could have been close to perfect, but instead descends into absurdity and leaves important questions unaddressed.
Read MoreReview: Sherlock Holmes: Chapter One
Sherlock Holmes: Chapter One follows a young Sherlock Holmes as he returns to Cordona, the island where he spent his early childhood. The open-world nature of the investigative work creates a foundation that will sustain gameplay beyond the primary narrative.
Read MoreReview: Life is Strange: True Colors
True Colors is the latest installment in the Life is Strange series and was developed by Deck Nine. True Colors follows a brand new protagonist, Alex, with a brand new superpower— empathy. While there are several areas where I just wanted more out of the experience, I’m still debating if this game might actually be better than the original Life is Strange.
Read MoreReview: Hercule Poirot: The First Cases
This is a dialogue-driven point-and-click game where the player assumes the role of a young Hercule Poirot, navigating around crime scenes, talking to suspects, and linking cues in a series of mind maps. There is absolutely nothing innovative in this installment. It does less than other games in this genre, and what it does, it doesn't really do well.
Read MoreReview: Murder by Numbers
Murder by Numbers provided something like 40 hours of nonogram puzzles over the last year.
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