IGN
Reviews
388 reviewsDoes Batman: Arkham City live up to the hype and surpass the original? Yes. Yes, it does.
Dark Souls has consumed our lives, and it's finally time for us to tell you our final verdict. Are you prepared to die?
An OK racer that's hampered by the classic movie game treatment.
Lack of challenge holds back what could have been a good RPG.
It's not real Kung Fu, but it's still pretty fun.
It's been over four and a half years since the Wii's Virtual Console first went live. Now here's our chance to go back in time one more time.
Rockstar Games takes the side of the good guys in its risky new police procedural.
Creating a sequel without playing all the same notes and making it feel like Portal: The Longer Version is a tough task. For Valve, it's apparently no problem.
Get ready to plunge back into the wastelands, Fallout: New Vegas is here. Does it live up to the high standards Fallout 3 set two years ago?
Farming fun for gamers with a green thumb.
Four Spider-Men are better than one.
Sadly the Wii will have to wait for its day in the sun as NHL 2K11 has some annoying aspects to its core hockey, despite putting Wii MotionPlus to decent use in-game.
The American West has made actors famous and writers rich. It has inspired childhood playground games and grizzled country singers alike. Its stories of heroes and bandits, gold rushes and simple homesteaders have been fictionalized and romanticized to the point that they're known the world over. And yet, videogame makers have either ignored the setting or attempted to squeeze it into existing game conventions. That has all changed now that Rockstar, the group made famous for its Grand Theft Aut
Heavy Rain is a hell of an experience. Its controversial control scheme actually works really well in allowing the fantastic story to dictate how events play out, and many of the game's scenes will keep you on the edge of your seat.
Take a moment to consider how bizarre this game world really is. It's set in an underwater sprawl of surface-style skyscrapers, a city called Rapture. Filling the pressurized space is a society founded by an industrialist named Andrew Ryan with the notion that there'd be no limits on what the individual could accomplish. It was all a spectacular failure as the civilization that developed on the ocean floor turned to genetic modification. Gradually their sanity was devoured by their unrestricted
Wield the power of the Omnitrix.
Spielberg wouldn't invite you to this park.
A game about great novels shouldn't be this poorly written.
Is this professional bull riding game a bucking good time?
Is this professional bull riding game a bucking good time?