Game Informer

Game Informer

Reviews

578 reviews
World's End Club's dull platforming mechanics, story, and ensemble cast make it a chore to play.
Biomutant
6.5/10
65
Despite bursting at the seams with cool ideas, Biomutant is a largely hollow experience that only provides fleeting glimpses of greatness.
Knockout City
8.5/10
85
With a fun core, approachable gameplay, and intense rubber-ball firefights, Knockout City lets everyone get in on the enjoyable dodgeball action.
A fun run through cyberpunk Detroit
The Missing Heir gives you a chance to experience a key point in visual novel history.
Even all these years later, Commander Shepard is a powerful force that lives up to their iconic status, and the trilogy is still captivating and worth your time.
This second dive into an alien sea delivers a continual sense of wonder with huge discoveries backed by a strong story.
Village doesn’t pull any punches when it comes to horror, but a consistent rollout of new weapons and tools makes it hard to walk away from these terrors.
Returnal
9.5/10
95
A deadly alien planet is a playground for your senses and curiosity.
New Pokémon Snap delivers all the thrills of the original game, but that throwback spirit isn't the only part of the experience that will give you a feeling of déjà vu.
Nier Replicant's colorful characters, sprawling story, and updated gameplay mechanics help make up for its old-fashioned quest design and empty world.
Sony's long-running baseball series impress on the diamond yet again, but doesn't deliver many new experiences.
Soulstorm retains the series' signature charm, but it's not enough to forgive its tedious and dated design as well its litany of swear-inducing technical issues.
Pac-Man 99
7.5/10
75
A lack of any kind of tutorial is frustrating at first, but once you get the hang of the action, Pac-Man 99 is a fun way to fill lulls in your day
Outriders lived up to every single expectation I had and then some.
Lost Words: Beyond The Page is an interesting way to tell an interactive story, venturing into territory that isn’t often explored in video games.
Narita Boy
7.75/10
78
Narita Boy has more style than it knows what to do with and boasts a killer-looking world, but setbacks in gameplay can make it more fun to admire than to engage with.
The Final Cut opens this strange world up to a wave of new superstar detectives on console, and the additions provide a rewarding return trip for the rest of us.
Inelegant systems and unsatisfying progression throw a wrench in the grand plans of this criminal mastermind.
The core farming loop is still entertaining, but the rewards aren’t satisfying enough for the investment required to get them.