Kill Screen's Scores
- Games
For 340 reviews, this publication has graded:
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19% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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76% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Game review score: 67
| Highest review score: | Bloodborne | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Hatred |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 112 out of 340
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Mixed: 199 out of 340
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Negative: 29 out of 340
340
game
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
Mafia III is a game that’s held back by its conventional anchors. It wants to be game about the South but remains content to use its setting rarely as little more than a local color curiosity. It proposes a radical representation of race but falls prey to the conventional chores of open-world banality. Though it initially seems eager to “Tell about the South,” Mafia III does not have the patience or interest to do so. Its violence and exploitation-style racial politics, however, make the trip to New Bordeaux worth effort—as long as the person heading down South isn’t looking for anything more than a sightseeing tour.- Kill Screen
- Posted Nov 4, 2016
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The suburbanization, the cartoonish aesthetic, and the “one more turn” addictiveness are still recognizable parts of the core experience people keep coming back for. It is still a full, massive, joyous videogame, even if I have to squint to find the joy beneath mere wit—but the two extremes are now growing wider and wider apart. How long before the fabric of the game snaps under the strain?- Kill Screen
- Posted Nov 3, 2016
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For the most part, Ladykiller in a Bind dares to be unapologetically itself rather than a game made for any one set of people.- Kill Screen
- Posted Nov 2, 2016
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Owlboy is itself as joyful and powerful an example of such art as I can recall. That it also happens to be an exceptionally well-crafted and tasteful videogame made by a very small group of people may not entirely be a coincidence.- Kill Screen
- Posted Oct 27, 2016
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It also places that desire for discovery within another person’s mind, just like Conrad, and keeps its player, like Conrad’s reader, at a critical remove. It lets you see a bigger picture than the grid of hexagons it depicts; it lets you see the mindset that creates the grid, and what that way of thinking inevitably ends up doing.- Kill Screen
- Posted Oct 24, 2016
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Masquerada declines as the plot slows down. The herky-jerky pace gets more grating, the mania for proper nouns more distracting. What looked like a scrappy little underdog RPG turns out to be a collection of worn-out ideas.- Kill Screen
- Posted Oct 20, 2016
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Thoth isn’t here to make friends. It is decidedly ruthless and daunting, a challenge with matched aesthetics, but not a whole lot more than that.- Kill Screen
- Posted Oct 19, 2016
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A good game, like any good work of art, should make you wonder; it should give you a reason to care about what happens, just as it should give you reasons to enjoy what it asks you do. Aragami feels only half-invested in doing both of those things, so it does neither. By failing to follow through on its own best ideas, it leaves us with nothing but a shadow of the game that could have been.- Kill Screen
- Posted Oct 17, 2016
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There’s something to be said for the sensation of Thumper’s mid-game, where survival is the goal, ignorant of whatever score comes along with it.- Kill Screen
- Posted Oct 13, 2016
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I will likely return to Pavilion to get lost in its digital labyrinths, to discover how objects can be rearranged to play with the narrative of a faceless man in a suit. When I return to Pavilion’s twisty little passages in Chapter 2 next year, I hope recall that feeling of blissful disorientation I felt in the dizzying corridors of Borges’ prose.- Kill Screen
- Posted Oct 12, 2016
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Gears 4 takes only half measures. It discards a lighthearted adventure premise for another fate-of-humanity monster invasion. It gives up on the anti-militarist bent of its early fight against the COG for another plot about soldiers trying to save humanity.- Kill Screen
- Posted Oct 11, 2016
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The creators of Pac-Man CE 2 had the difficult task of remixing a game that has already been expanded upon and reworked to the point of refinement, and they chose to pile on the complexity anyway. The result is a Frankenstein’s Pac-Man—a mess of features and modes that, despite all the power pellets and fruit and ghosts, still left me feeling hungry.- Kill Screen
- Posted Oct 7, 2016
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You’d hope that, once you’ve figured out Beglitched’s puzzle system it would start to gain momentum. In fact, what happens is it starts to feel a little repetitive.- Kill Screen
- Posted Oct 7, 2016
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In a detail that I can only laugh at, my most enjoyable time spent with Rise of Iron was in fact spent climbing a mountain.- Kill Screen
- Posted Oct 5, 2016
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By bridging the gap between our daily struggles and the daydreams that surround them, it suggests that the one space we truly own is our imagination. There is a certain beauty hidden in that sentiment; that it is the fantastic, the surreal, the strange, that might liberate us.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 29, 2016
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All in all, the game feels like a tourist trap rather than a destination.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 26, 2016
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By the game’s end, I found I didn’t care about any of the characters. Instead, I was fed up, hunting down the rest of the prismatic cores in order to reach the end. The game had done a full 180. It’s a major disappointment, given the promise ReCore shows at its beginning, when it’s just Joule and Mack.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 23, 2016
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Lord knows videogame characters could stand to be quieter, but Virginia can’t convey the necessary emotional depth to make its story stick. The ideas at play piqued my interest pre-release: two women of color as its leads, the promise of a new spin on enduring cop show tropes, surrealist touches. But Virginia is selling points all over, a mood board of ideas—some cool, some musty—that take the player’s interest as self-evident. Anyone who’s seen a movie before should probably just watch another.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 23, 2016
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In the end, it’s kitsch. It’s a Soviet-themed Lego set that renders a monumental socio-political phenomenon into little else but a toy. And an exceptionally boring one at that.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 21, 2016
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Don’t expect to find touchscreens, paper-thin televisions, or computers any smaller than a child here.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 19, 2016
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A competently executed tactical RPG with a jejune script and stylized window dressing.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 16, 2016
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The most flattering description I can offer Mother Russia Bleeds is that of an enjoyably formulaic brawler, but the ferocity of its execution was refined enough to get lodged in my head. I can’t quite work it out: it exists like a ringing in my ears that has no obvious source. Or, rather, it’s a third-gen VHS copy of its influences, a quavery deja vu of a violent brawler both familiar and unsettling.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 13, 2016
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I won’t remember my time with The Girl and the Robot feeling like a magical fairytale. I’ll recall it being a poorly designed, stressful videogame. And that’s a shame, because that initial art sure was cute.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 9, 2016
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With Obduction, Cyan has created another game that’s an art of personal journaling. What you know, what you’ve gathered, will save you. The tools seem familiar but it is details that are your weapons. As the otherworldly overlaps the banal, you’re trapped in a labyrinth of places and things.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 8, 2016
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While Moon Hunters may not be the perfect game, it nobly aims for the stars, and for that alone it is memorable.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 7, 2016
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If Starbound has one major downside it’s that there is no pause button. A pithy consideration, I know, but it means if you’re exploring a cavern found deep within the recesses of a new planet, you cannot pause to take a much-needed bathroom break. And since enemies can spawn at any time, you can’t walk away from your computer in confidence, either. But the lack of a pause button almost feels apt: in Starbound, there can be no pause button, no way to suspend you from this childhood fantasy.- Kill Screen
- Posted Sep 5, 2016
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It’s the decisions that bind the experience; enabling The Banner Saga 2 to transcend its videogame construct. You’re left with an experience that feels not only alive, but alive with the complexities of the real world.- Kill Screen
- Posted Aug 30, 2016
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Grow Home had a simple purity to it—you were a robot, it could climb, and so it did, all the way up to space. Grow Up repeats this journey but steadily turns BUD into Inspector Gadget as you complete its trials.- Kill Screen
- Posted Aug 26, 2016
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But, despite all its flaws, Bound is undoubtedly a celebration of the female form, both physically and spiritually. And, for that, it could be said to be a game better viewed as one to experience rather than to play, and the fact that it tries to encompass so many deep psychological metaphors in the videogame format is an ambition worth praising.- Kill Screen
- Posted Aug 26, 2016
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For being a cyberpunk ode to the potential promise of transhumanism, the missions around Mankind Divided‘s central narrative feel terribly familiar.- Kill Screen
- Posted Aug 24, 2016
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It doesn’t exactly crack open the full literary potential of randomly-generated story beats, but it does use it to an enjoyable-enough cutesy effect, which is pages more than most flarfy corpses have ever achieved.- Kill Screen
- Posted Aug 22, 2016
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Ultimately, though, Near Death has nothing to say beyond the struggle to navigate the harshest environment on Earth.- Kill Screen
- Posted Aug 17, 2016
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This is the experience of playing No Man’s Sky, a series of recurring structures that overlap and intersect, a surprisingly knowable collection of repeatable actions.- Kill Screen
- Posted Aug 15, 2016
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I wish I Am Setsuna took me on another beautiful, multifaceted adventure like it wanted to, as the JRPGs that its creators admire once did. I wish the characters weren’t bland caricatures of familiar characters I’ve seen in the past. Instead, it feels like a cold attempt at harboring nostalgia, only managing to remind me of JRPGs of the golden age, and how so much better they were—and, critically, still are.- Kill Screen
- Posted Aug 10, 2016
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In the annals of dungeoneering, Necropolis stands out for its lack of imagination.- Kill Screen
- Posted Aug 8, 2016
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Many games, largely, want to create mayhem where messages may also occur, while protests, largely, want to create messages where mayhem may also occur. Anarcute wants an adorable inferno. The joke is that the destruction is big but the perps are cutie wuties. But I don’t know if I have the planet to play it on.- Kill Screen
- Posted Aug 4, 2016
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Like Journey, Abzû is in some sense a game about archetypes and archetypicality, letting you dwell within and among them as though to remind you of their firm embeddedness at the foundation of other things. And yet, in a significant structural twist, it’s about recovering archetypes that no longer seem to have potency, rather than playing through an archetypal sequence—the Journey—that’s still going strong.- Kill Screen
- Posted Aug 2, 2016
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By day 100, you’re starting to lose sight of the goal. They gave you 180 days to finish out your tenure as chief; at first it sounded like a death sentence, now it’s more like a prison sentence.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jul 28, 2016
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With Quadrilateral Cowboy, Chung eschews the filmic jump-cuts he experimented with in Thirty Flights of Loving. Still, the fragmented plot produces a similar result: as it happens, it already feels like a collection of memories.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jul 27, 2016
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From the room of VHS tapes, to the security footage, to the bat sanctuary, to the theremin performance, to the camera’s final, extended retreat up the rickety helix of a spiral staircase; Act IV confronts us with scenarios that test and limit our perception. Like Snow’s Wavelength, it gives us just enough to trick us into feeling like we’ve glimpsed something real.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jul 26, 2016
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Practice is for tryhards, and Videoball’s greatest strength is that it understands the value of isolated, localized competition.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jul 20, 2016
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- Posted Jul 18, 2016
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The story can go any way imaginable—from everyone coming away completely unscathed to literally causing the apocalypse—more so than maybe anything else I’ve ever played.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jul 14, 2016
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If the game has any message, it’s that the only thing more rewarding than admiring a lovely cathedral is watching it explode.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jul 7, 2016
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It has been suggested that Catalyst is a remake of Mirror’s Edge, or a reboot, but it is in reality a re-alignment of the first game with the recognizable features of a mainstream videogame, a reparation between the most original of its ideas and the most generic features of its medium.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jul 5, 2016
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Like Mass Effect, Dune, Foundation, and countless other sci-fi universes, it builds its extraterrestrial world from the ground up. Stellaris only borrows from all of their palettes to paint its own picture of the night sky—and a game about aliens feels all the less foreign as a result.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jun 30, 2016
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Playdead’s greatest feat in creating Inside was making it look like they never created it in the first place.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jun 28, 2016
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By trying to optimize it, the brave/default system inadvertently lays bare the arbitrariness structuring the player’s relation to the game, the role one ostensibly plays becoming repeatable and, indeed, automatable in yet another striking parallel to the looming “new economy.”- Kill Screen
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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At its core, VA-11 Hall-A is the rare cyberpunk story that has heart, and even goes so far as to give its female characters agency in their own lives. It’s a story where we, the player, take the backseat, and soak it all in. Just like a good book.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jun 21, 2016
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Slain! is a poser, well-dressed and intentioned but vacuous, contributing nothing to the scene. It has the spiked gauntlets, the long hair, the denim jacket; but the house lights are on and everything’s out of tune.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jun 20, 2016
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OmniBus would work better if it rolled with its own punches instead of creating a system that only exists to be fought with—the reward is smaller when randomness does so much of the grunt work. Just sit back and let the car drive you into the sun. Life just flies by so fast when you’re having fun.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jun 10, 2016
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Warhammer’s world is sketched out by an ocean of rules, obsessed with the collision of fantasy with the specter of realism.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jun 1, 2016
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Push Me Pull You proves that the “new arcade” of previous years is not dead; it’s been developing into something weirder, funnier, and brighter than we’d expected.- Kill Screen
- Posted May 27, 2016
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It’s this tradition that gives us Dambuster’s lamentable Homefront: The Revolution, the sequel to THQ’s Homefront (2011) that neither critics nor players asked for.- Kill Screen
- Posted May 25, 2016
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With more time to flesh out the world and, most importantly, a more creative progression of challenges to match your skill, this could have been a special game. Instead, just as its titular character is trapped in time by default, Shadwen is a stealth game forever trapped in a state of adolescence.- Kill Screen
- Posted May 23, 2016
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It’s a game with confidence in the worth of revisiting its history and an earnest belief that doing so can result in much more than an empty exercise in nostalgia.- Kill Screen
- Posted May 18, 2016
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A couple hours into Glitchspace, I hoped for a break in the progression and the chance to explore my newly acquired skills, but instead the complexity is continuously layered on top of itself until the game ends.- Kill Screen
- Posted May 17, 2016
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Ace of Seafood is not a game about what it’s like to be a fish. But it does, in oddly literal ways, imagine what it would be like for a human to be a fish, albeit a marauding and cybernetic one. But perhaps that’s exactly the point.- Kill Screen
- Posted May 12, 2016
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Uncharted 4 offers nothing profound, assured in its own way that it has nothing to prove.- Kill Screen
- Posted May 10, 2016
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At its best, Fragments of Him says, “No, you really don’t understand. Let me show you.”- Kill Screen
- Posted May 5, 2016
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Stephen’s Sausage Roll is tough and tumbly, with a greater emphasis on one’s own form than any other puzzle game, which usually waiver the avatar as too grotesque of its gorgeous world.- Kill Screen
- Posted May 2, 2016
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As a game, Star Fox Zero isn’t so much broken as deeply and disappointingly lacking in inspiration. Shiny but not smooth, it’s a game about a space-faring fox in a spaceship that turns into a chicken without any sense of joy, and that might be the biggest disappointment of all.- Kill Screen
- Posted Apr 28, 2016
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Dark Souls III isn’t the kind of melancholy original that Demon’s Souls was, and it doesn’t pivot to another genre like Bloodborne turned toward horror. Instead it leans into the absurdity of bringing together every idea the series ever had and throws a pretty amazing going-away party for it.- Kill Screen
- Posted Apr 14, 2016
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Despite the kinks, some of which may be ironed out in future installments, 1979 Revolution represents an unusual and largely successful mix of an adventure game and history lesson.- Kill Screen
- Posted Apr 13, 2016
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Quantum Break, in enlarging their length and complexity, turns them into a crutch that’s forced to support a game that can’t consistently match their appeal.- Kill Screen
- Posted Apr 12, 2016
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Out of the void, Hyper Light Drifter meticulously crafts a post-apocalyptic samurai story, one that bends and folds the tenets of zen’s vivid ambience alongside the warrior path of bushido, something familiar yet fresh, quiet yet resonant.- Kill Screen
- Posted Apr 7, 2016
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What begins as a weighty trudge through the festering underbelly of dark forests and abandoned keeps slowly evolves, growing lighter and more nuanced and intuitive.- Kill Screen
- Posted Apr 5, 2016
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Recursion through each of the game’s three paths from that originary fork forces you to rethink your place in its world and drives the game’s argument home: Fire Emblem Fates rejects fatalism beautifully.- Kill Screen
- Posted Mar 29, 2016
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Maybe the best way to play Samorost 3 is to play with it, to think of it as a bizarrely-shaped thing that prompts one to appreciate the ways oddities can spark and delight the imagination. At least that’s the way I’ll continue to play it, curiously wandering through alien environments, turning each sight and sound over and over in my head, very much like I once did with a strange piece of wood I encountered when I was young.- Kill Screen
- Posted Mar 24, 2016
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From this perspective, the Pokémon isn’t a creature of its own agency, but a mere extension of its trainer’s body and mind; a tool in a rat race, forever wrestling in the futile pursuit of human ambition. And when you look at it that way, all the thematic waffling starts to make a whole lot of sense.- Kill Screen
- Posted Mar 22, 2016
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In No Pineapple Left Behind, from Subaltern Games, you play as this peculiar principal. You have to juggle the responsibilities of supporting teachers, improving students’ grades, and managing a budget. This is quite a job, where accounting for every dollar of your daily spending allowance becomes crucial. It is much easier to resort to your magical power, which drains the humanity from kids, turning them into pineapples.- Kill Screen
- Posted Mar 21, 2016
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The Division is a game so eager to criminalize the poor, so eager to play into clichés of class war. Yet it staunchly refuses to take responsibility for its representations, for its politics. If we want that to change, we have to make it, and its creators, responsible.- Kill Screen
- Posted Mar 16, 2016
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Californium is only here to deliver the report: life is a pixel hunt, and there is no hint line.- Kill Screen
- Posted Mar 15, 2016
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Its view of America is simple, but simplicity keeps the game focused on survival in a wilderness that refuses to be tamed.- Kill Screen
- Posted Mar 9, 2016
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Far Cry Primal is basically everything I just described, without a whole lot of irony. Which is to say it often feels enormously, almost amazingly stupid.- Kill Screen
- Posted Mar 7, 2016
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Street Fighter V has traded a physical space for the intimacy of a digital one: an internet meeting with a mysterious stranger. When a match announces itself, loudly, it’s impossible to not get excited. And suddenly, you’re fighting: you, some anonymous other, and the small, limited locale in which you’ve agreed to meet.- Kill Screen
- Posted Mar 4, 2016
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Stomaching the jump scares and heavily recycled horror imagery will earn you a handful of mesmerizing vistas, but Layers of Fear fails to challenge or transform its central trope.- Kill Screen
- Posted Mar 2, 2016
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Despite all odds, it seems Stardew Valley is a different game than the one it mimics. And a pretty fun, different game at that.- Kill Screen
- Posted Mar 1, 2016
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Having laid the groundwork for interrogating this dynamic, however, Solstice tends more toward murder mystery dinner theater than fantasy film noir. A penchant for playful melodrama and comedic banter in many ways undercuts the tension established through the game’s mystery and its interactive methods for unraveling it.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 29, 2016
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As with many Nintendo games of the last few years, its gameplay elements are immaculately designed but risk nothing.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 26, 2016
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There is no shooter quite as willing to prostrate itself before its audience as SUPERHOT while always reminding them that, no matter how tough the game may make them feel, that same sensation can be stolen from them in a heartbeat.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 25, 2016
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American Truck Simulator reflected the anxious reality, but also allowed me to appreciate the grandeur of it all. I can finally see what I presume most other Americans have always enjoyed: Endless waves of asphalt paved just for me, veining the contiguous southwest, begging to be casually traversed.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 23, 2016
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Under these terms, XCOM 2 isn’t so much a game about liberating humanity from its extraterrestrial overlords, but a statement about the kinds of stories our games can tell and allow to be told, even when they aren’t especially valued for their narrative. It speaks to the sense that we might not just want stories in our games, but authored fields of narrative possibility.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 19, 2016
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If you’re going to be damned for all eternity to fight for your afterlife, at least it’s with such a lovingly crafted homage to the shooters of yesteryear—and you don’t even need to worry about whether you’ve got the latest Soundblaster card this time around.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 18, 2016
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Atmospheric traumas might read as much like the privilege of a certain upbringing as the Matisse print hanging up in the protagonist’s childhood home. That said, Between Me And The Night never feels less than sincere and heartfelt while doing this. And if you can embrace its perspective, the game stands to offer a moving and smart depiction of navigating life through the scrim of an angst born in childhood.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 17, 2016
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It’s a beautiful, beguiling place to spend some time, absolutely worth it while you’re there, but sooner rather than later you’ll yearn to shed its shackles, to get off the beaten path.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 16, 2016
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For all of the precise, rigid design of The Witness, playing in its world remains a human endeavor—one where the rocks aren’t always as solid as they look.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 12, 2016
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That said, while The Deadly Tower of Monsters might be silly and a little clunky, it’s hard not to root for something that lovingly apes (for lack of a better word) a bygone era so successfully.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 11, 2016
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Despite all of its cutesy posturing and promises, Unravel is still looking to fill some kind of void. And I’m not sure if that void is its shortcomings as a mood board, as a videogame, or a cloying digestible basket of “feels” for EA.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 9, 2016
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It is a throwback in many senses, not just to the history of its own series, but to images of war that came to us already cold, already distant.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 2, 2016
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It is a beautifully gothic dungeon-crawler with a wealth of clever mechanics, the most unique of which is that, as your adventurers delve deeper into Lovecraftian tunnels, coves, and ruins, they become stressed.- Kill Screen
- Posted Feb 1, 2016
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The game does deliver scenes between levels that color some of your writers’ inner lives, but they are too minor to establish much empathy for, say, a writer disappearing by the regime’s hand in the post-game wrap up.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jan 28, 2016
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For a game that has zero puzzle elements Nuclear Throne sure feels like a seeing-eye puzzle.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jan 27, 2016
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- Posted Jan 22, 2016
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In the end, Oxenfree is absolutely a game about teenage bullshit (forgive me for being a little disingenuous earlier). But it manages to revitalize that narrative by focusing on feeling more than substance; it glances at each character’s inner struggle rather than serving it up for a full meal.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jan 15, 2016
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Rainbow Six: Siege has the basic pieces in place to offer that experience but sabotages them by forcing the illusion to rub against the real world in ways the fantasy isn’t prepared to handle. More often than not, playing Siege, one doesn’t feel like a soldier. You feel like a player. And that’s precisely what this game doesn’t want.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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Numinous Games’ That Dragon, Cancer does not suffer from this problem; the pain feels real, the sadness is authentic. This is not surprising given that the game is undisguised autobiography: Ryan and Amy Green created it as a meditation on their family’s journey as their son Joel was treated for and eventually killed by brain cancer.- Kill Screen
- Posted Jan 12, 2016
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It ought to remind us of what’s so good about the maximalism of other JRPGs.- Kill Screen
- Posted Dec 11, 2015
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But Heroes’s oddest design choice is surely its violation of a Zelda tradition since time immemorial (i.e. 1986): Link can’t jump.- Kill Screen
- Posted Dec 11, 2015
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Prominence isn’t so much a failure as it is a missed opportunity. With a narrative background about an oppressed people struggling to free themselves by pushing the limits of science and technology, the story is set up for success. But unfortunately, those possibilities are rarely explored in Prominence itself, making for a rather sterile narrative experience with sleek sci-fi surroundings.- Kill Screen
- Posted Dec 8, 2015
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