|
|
|
|
Rich takes on Assemble Entertainment's relaxing puzzle game Growth for Nintendo Switch. Growth is a cosy, hexagonal-grid based soft-strategy game by VoodooDuck. Explore and populate a procedurally generated world by utilizing the unique abilities of animals. Growth blends the beauty of cosy exploration with challenging navigation around obstacles.
Rich dons his frilly maid's apron and begins making beds, picking up dirty socks and scrubbing baths in This Bed We Made on The PC.
This Bed We Made is a third-person mystery game in which you play as a maid in a 1950s hotel and snoop around strangers' rooms to uncover their deadly secrets. Discover what links guests together in this tale of love, heartbreak and murder!
“The most blasphemous, diabolical and insane management game ever created!” – a quote taken directly from the trailer of The Kindeman Remedy, and the main reason I wanted to play this game, now granted I’m not sure how blasphemous or diabolical other management games are, so I was just going to have to take their word for it. That said, it’s an interesting hook, and I was dying to see just how insane this game was.
Rethink human’s dominion in The Invincible: a story-driven adventure set in a hard sci-fi world by Stanisław Lem. Discover planet Regis III as scientist Yasna, use atompunk tools looking for a missing crew and face unforeseen threats. Make choices in a philosophical story that’s driven by science.
I’m going to start off by saying that the original Blasphemous is one of my favourite games of recent years. A difficult hack and slash platformer? Check. Monstrous religious cult storyline with Lovecraftian elements? Check. That’s one for me all day long.
I’m pleased to be able to say that the sequel has all of these elements in spades and may even be better than the first game.
How much fun can you have with multiple toasters, a ball and constantly changing arenas?
The answer is surprisingly, a massive amount of toasty ball FUN!
A ball, two goals and... toasters! Welcome to Toasterball. Play against your friends in this physics-based multiplayer sports game, where toasters are athletes, bread flies everywhere and the gameplay changes every time you score a goal!I’ve been a fan of Piranha Bytes since discovering the first Risen game back on the PS3. After completing that game, I was so taken by the rough ‘n ready (also slightly bizarre) style of the Piranha Bytes games that I worked backwards and picked up Gothic 3, also enjoying that title – but finding it a bit awkward to get to run on my PC, at the time.
Since moving on from both the Gothic and Risen series, Piranha Bytes are now working on their third ELEX game, a series that I’ve had a mixed opinion of, especially because of the game-breaking bugs I encountered when reviewing ELEX 2 last year.
Through all of this though, Gothic 2 is held as somewhat of a high watermark of their games in terms of narrative, quest design and atmosphere. Playing it on the Switch was my first time with the game, and whilst it is certainly showing its age in many areas, that janky charm and idiosyncratic approach to quests and dialogue does still feel fun and fresh, and kept me coming back for more, each evening.
Cherry was cheery. She was an android with a lovely girlfriend, and life was good. But you know the old story – girl bot meets girl bot, girl bots fall in love, bad guy steals girl bot and stomps the other to a pulp. A tale as old as time. And so it’s not surprising that Cherry’s demeanour switches from joyful to rageful pretty quickly.
The cinematic platformer is a genre well-suited to Switch, as the impact of the pixel visuals works especially well in docked mode, when you can snuggle up in bed or in a comfy chair and dive into a genre that tends to never be overlong, by design, making them relaxing experiences over a night or two.
Developer OutOfTheBit Ltd have delivered a strong slice of such action, in a wonderfully wordless experience that clocks in at around a couple of hours, making it a breezy game to replay – in a similar vein to Devwill Too on MD, a game I routinely return to each year, for its brevity and melancholy.
Rich prepares himself for a ten minute taster vid on Achilles: Legends Untold which is an action RPG with a souls-like combat system.
Master blocking and dodging, explore vast open world with countless challenges. Rise stronger after setbacks, enhance attributes, acquire skills, wield blazing swords or a poisoned spear. Are you ready for unforgettable adventure?
Sometimes, it seems like celebrities live in a totally different world. But actually, that is not true! They have a lot of common things that they do on a regular basis. For example, superstars can be fans of video gaming too.
It has become more noticeable in recent years when the popularity of video games has been growing. So, let`s discuss the top 4 famous people who play video games from time to time.
Rich wanders into a mansion on his first day at work only to find himself confronted with unspeakable Pixel art horror! Explore in top-down retro aesthetics and face the horrors of Breckenridge Hall in pulse-pounding first person combat. Scavenge for supplies, solve puzzles, and upgrade your gear. Do whatever it takes to survive, but remember: You Will Die Here Tonight.
Today I received the latest expanded and remastered 4th Edition of 40 Best Machine Code Routines for the ZX Spectrum book.
The book features the full original text from the original 1983 release that was written by John Hardman and Andrew Hewson.
As an added bonus there are now new forewords from both original authors which does a great job of putting the book into context.
There’s also all-new content from legendary programmer and Spectrum Next founding member Jim Bagley.
As an added bonus there’s new cover art by Mike Berry of Old Skool Pixels fame.
And at the end of the book there’s a great appendix full of ZX Spectrum Memories which is a delight to read!
If you like what you see then Head over to huey games.com to grab your copy for £18.99.