
I don’t know about you guys, but I love a good people watching session. Nothing quite beats sitting down in a comfy cushioned chair in a secluded corner of a coffee house, drinking something bitter and warm, watching as a myriad of people you know absolutely nothing about go on about their own lives, seemingly

Big games are great aren’t they? You can spend hours, days, or even longer exploring a deep, rich world that’s full of side-quests and things to find. BUt while they’re great, sometimes I just want to take a break and play something easy that resets my brain, where I don’t have to worry about anything.

Always in on trying a new platformer, Drew locked in with Planet Cube: Edge – the newest retro-styled run and jumper from Firestoke!

Overall Exoprimal is a good time. It gives you that almost pick up & play feeling of blasting through waves of enemies alongside a clever story
In celebration of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem hitting cinemas this week, Paramount pictures (Nickelodeon) are teaming up with Creā-ture Studios and Nacon to bring the four heroes in a half-shell to Session: Skate Sim as a free update.
In September The Room will celebrate a decade of being available. This also marks 10 years since Fireproof Games will have released their first, and BAFTA-award winning game. To mark the occasion, the developers will be running a meaty sale across all platforms for the entire series starting in September.
Disgaea 7 Vows of the Virtueless is the latest entry into NIS’s long running Strategy-RPG and is set to release in October. The game is a standalone title set in the depths of hell and on the build up to the game’s release, NIS have given us a look at what sets the SRPG apart

Let’s kick some ice. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a bad movie that relies too heavily on ice puns. Wildfrost by, Deadpan Games and Gaziter is a roguelite deckbuilding game in a style popularised by Slay the Spire. There are lots of games of this ilk but Wildfrost stands out from the crowd with its own twists and

It’s funny how forgotten memories ping back into existence when there is the slightest trigger. Every time I watch Jurassic Park my mind takes me back to those red velvet seats of Macclesfield cinema, where a miniature Joe is tucking into some mint Matchmakers and staring at awe in the T-Rex charging at an injured

Warhammer 40,000: Boltgun is a fantastic example of a game exploiting the nostalgia for something that never actually existed. Its look and feel is exactly what late-thirties me feels that teenage me would have envisaged if told there was a Warhammer 40,000 set first-person shooter coming out in the mid 90s, right down to the