Dungeons & Dragons has likely been around longer than you, the reader, has been alive. It has gone through many iterations and forms, full revisions, and even a few lawsuits,
There may not be many of you out there, but if the things you cherish most in this life are digital pinball machines and Fox Entertainment’s animated programming, life
Deify me if you must, video game, but I don’t necessarily see myself as a God for simply creating the universe. Perhaps when that doodled fire came near that
“L-l-l-l-l-look at you, hacker. A pa-pa-pathetic creature of meat and bone.”
If that sentence gives you chills up your spine, then you’ve played System Shock. A mix of cyberpunk,
Myself and the other Spartans of Team Osiris are surrounded by Covenant enemies who are understandably pissed off about the recent misunderstanding we had with their comrades. I’ve got
If you’ve ever played Kirby’s Epic Yarn, then you know what to expect from Yoshi’s Woolly World, which feels a lot like its sequel. Both titles feature
[The following is part five of our Tales from the Borderlands review, and covers the game’s finale “The Vault of the Traveler.” As such, it also contains our final
Assassin’s Creed was once the beacon at which many open-world games strived to surpass. These days, that beacon has dimmed after a mediocre Assassin’s Creed Unity release that
Pandora, Google Music, Slacker, Netflix, Hulu — the people have spoken. They are done waiting. While there are still hold-outs like me who still enjoy the benefits of physical ownership, it
Toys-to-life games haven’t managed to hook me in at all. The idea of game content tied to physical figurines was already a little sketchy, and when you start looking
Fatal Frame has always been a series that eluded me, spare the few hours I spent with Crimson Butterfly on the PS2 on a weekend video-store rental. The concept was