Reviews

Latest Reviews

  • Review Dance! It's Your Stage (PlayStation 3)

    Step up or step off

    PlayStation Move has seen six dancing games in its first year on sale, but none have hit the heights in the same way as Harmonix's Dance Central on Kinect, with Sony's SingStar Dance and Konami's DanceDanceRevolution the closest we've come to boogie bliss. The latest publisher to step up and try its luck is PQube with Dance! It's...

  • Review Champion Jockey (PlayStation 3)

    Stable

    While some of the world's biggest sports are absent from PlayStation Move — we're looking at you, FIFA and Madden NFL — the controller has proved an enticing prospect for developers keen to bring, shall we say, less widely-embraced sports to the masses. After PDC World Championship Darts: Pro Tour and WSC Real 11, Tecmo Koei has taken the...

  • Review Renegade Ops (PlayStation 3)

    Renegade Ops is a bombastic and knowingly stupid co-operative shooter with some outstanding production values

    Explosions are exciting things. They incite the most childish inhibitions in any man, harking back to those playground days spent pretending to be soldiers and watching Transformers cartoons (the originals, of course) on television. Renegade...

  • Review The Impossible Game (PlayStation Minis)

    The Impossible Game is designed around one key principle: stress

    This is one of the most tense, frustrating, devious and, bafflingly, moreish PlayStation Minis we've played to date. The concept is simple: jump over hazards to complete the level. How hard can it possibly be? The clue's in the name. Controlling a straight-forward orange square you...

  • Review SkyDrift (PlayStation 3)

    SkyDrift is a polished aerial racer with a thoughtful risk/reward sub-mechanic

    The game could benefit from a touch more content, but what's included is enough to channel a hearty does of nostalgia from a variety of late 90's arcade racers. The more we played SkyDrift, the more we came to the conclusion that its like Hyrdo Thunder in the sky. Hydro...

  • Review LittleBigPlanet 2 (PlayStation 3)

    Move your Sackthing!

    Sackboys and Sackgirls, lend us your ears! Craft World is in trouble! The Negativatron (basically an evil vacuum cleaner) is sucking up all the fun and dreams out of Craft World! It’s up to you to take control of your little Sackperson and save the planet from the Negativatron with help from your allies "The...

  • Review Resistance 3 (PlayStation 3)

    How far would you go to save your family?

    It’s been four long years since the dramatic events of Resistance 2 came to a close, and the war is over. Chimeran terraformers hover in the skies, transforming Earth into an icy wasteland reminiscent of the alien invaders' home world. Like enslaved prisoners, the few remaining survivors have taken refuge...

  • Review The Baconing (PlayStation 3)

    The Baconing certainly represents value for money, but it lacks imagination in places

    The tweaks to the combat make it a much more challenging affair, detracting from the franchise's strengths. But fans of the previous DeathSpank games will at least enjoy the game's writing and dialogue which, while not for everyone, is top-notch as usual. If...

  • Review 4 Elements HD (PlayStation 3)

    Fire, Earth, Wind, Water and Heart

    The first moments you spend with 4 Elements HD may have you thinking that the game is a little on the easy side, maybe even a bit simplistic. After you learn the basics of the tutorial and plow through some intro levels, you may even start to believe that you are really good at the game. Both of these assumptions...

  • Review Dead Island (PlayStation 3)

    Holiday of the dead

    Developer Techland is beginning to make a name for itself as a progressive, forward-thinking studio with some lofty ideas but not enough resources to realise them. Dead Island does not buck the developer's burgeoning trend. Part Borderlands, part Fallout, part Diablo, Dead Island is an inventive first person survival horror with...

  • Review Hysteria Project 2 (PlayStation Minis)

    In many ways Hysteria Project 2 is a step-backwards

    In trying to flesh out the ideas established in its predecessor, BulkyPix has crafted a game with more ambition and less polish, resulting in a frustrating mess of trial-and-error puzzles. Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me. It's an idiom we couldn't stop thinking during our...

  • Review Arkedo Series - 001 JUMP! (PlayStation 3)

    Sometimes the simplest ideas are the best

    The Arkedo Series — originally developed for Microsoft's Indie Games channel by Arkedo Games, and ported to the PS3 by Sanuk Games — epitomises that straight-forward premise. The first in a series of back-to-basics gameplay ideas, Jump is an old-school puzzle platformer with a pleasingly retro visual...

  • Review Revoltin' Youth (PlayStation Minis)

    Open Emotion may have shed its trademark hand-painted visuals for Revoltin' Youth, but the developer has still managed to concoct a refreshing style that's complimented by some great audio work and solid level design

    The game can feel tedious in places, but its still another solid entry in the Irish studio's growing catalogue of quality PlayStation...

  • Review Crazy Machines Elements (PlayStation 3)

    Isn't it nice when things just work? It's a slogan that will live with a generation, as Honda took inspiration from Rube Goldberg for one of the most fascinating marketing campaigns of all time

    Crazy Machines Elements may as well have been named The Honda Commercial: The Game, but we doubt developer Fakt Software could get the license. Citing the...

  • Review Ducati Challenge (PlayStation Minis)

    Ducati Challenge is easily the best racing game available for the PlayStation Minis platform

    The game's impressive visual presentation is complimented by its accessible handling model and rich variety of content. The PlayStation Minis platform has played host to some fantastic two-dimensional games, but it's been less successful with more ambitious...

  • Review Fighting Fantasy: Talisman Of Death (PlayStation Minis)

    Fans of the fiction will lap up Fighting Fantasy: Talisman Of Death, but though finely executed, it's also a niche proposition

    In an era when video games such as The Elder Scrolls seemed as mythical as their subject matter, Steve Jackson and Ian Livingstone's series of Fighting Fantasy gamebooks took geek culture by storm. Promising worlds filled...

  • Review Cubixx HD (PlayStation 3)

    A competent upgrade of an already stellar PlayStation Mini, Cubixx HD might be rooted in the same core principles as its predecessor but it is still essential for fans of intense, action-heavy puzzle titles

    In the hazy days of 2010, we described Laughing Jackal's debut PlayStation Mini, Cubixx, as a "surprisingly brilliant reworking of 80's...

  • Review Galaga Legions DX (PlayStation 3)

    Galaga Legions DX struggles to emerge from the shadows of its spiritual predecessor – Pac-Man Championship Edition DX – but it is still a similarly eye-watering re-imagining of an old arcade favourite

    It’s hard not to be excited about the successor to Pac-Man Championship Edition DX. Namco Bandai’s futuristic rethink of the classic pill-popping...

  • Review Phineas and Ferb: Across the Second Dimension (PlayStation 3)

    Summer lackluster

    Many licensed video games that release in the summer are based on big budget blockbusters complete with over-the-top action sequences, fully voiced dialogue and epic set pieces that strive to blur the line between movie and game. Phineas and Ferb: Across the 2nd Dimension is not such a game. Based on a made-for-TV Disney movie of...

  • Review Monochrome Racing (PlayStation Minis)

    Despite having an interesting visual style and some neat ideas, poor execution leaves Monochrome Racing feeling completely unrefined

    The game’s careless upgrade system and abhorrent AI leads to a flat, unsatisfying experience that’s not even worth the budget asking price. Monochrome Racing is built around a delightful concept. The idea of four...

  • Review UFC Personal Trainer: The Ultimate Fitness System (PlayStation 3)

    Strapping

    The PlayStation Move fitness game race got off to a slow start with just one title in the first six months, but it's just received its most high-profile title yet in the form of UFC Personal Trainer: The Ultimate Fitness System from THQ. Is this muscular title enough to steal the crown from budget alternative My Fitness Coach: Club?...

  • Review OMG-Z (PlayStation Minis)

    Great pacing and a satisfying hook make OMG-Z difficult to put down

    Some games are more fun when the odds are stacked heavily in your favour. Initial impressions will dupe you into thinking Laughing Jackal's latest PlayStation Mini is a puzzle game, but once you start to earn money and upgrade your equipment it becomes a much more chaotic...

  • Review Section 8: Prejudice (PlayStation 3)

    Section 8: Prejudice is potentially one of the most dense multiplayer experiences available on the PlayStation 3, which is staggering considering its budget price-point

    If you're able to ignore the bland art direction and cliche sci-fi setting, there's a lot to get out of this downloadable first-person shooter. Over the past three-or-four years...

  • Review National Geographic Challenge! (PlayStation 3)

    Around the world and back again

    Imagine the possibilities of combining PlayStation Move and National Geographic magazine, exploring the rich expanses of the world with the super-accurate motion controller in your hand and so much more. The potential seems limitless, doesn't it? What a shame, then, that National Geographic Challenge! is a quiz game...

  • Review Fast Draw Showdown (PlayStation 3)

    Shooting blanks

    Ported from the 1994 light gun arcade machine, Fast Draw Showdown makes its debut on the PSN. The setting takes place in the old Western times when arguments often started with booze and ended with lead, and all you need to do is draw your gun from its holster faster than your opponent. Using often corny and scripted video clips...

  • Review Call of Juarez: The Cartel (PlayStation 3)

    There are some great ideas in Call Of Juarez: The Cartel, but misdirection and sloppy execution let the package down

    While the game's emphasis on mindless action can be thrilling at times, a slew of technical mishaps lessen the appeal of the title's more bombastic moments. Call Of Juarez: Bound In Blood was one of our favourite games of 2009...

  • Review Captain America: Super Soldier (PlayStation 3)

    Captain America: Super Soldier might not bring many new ideas to the table, but it is an enjoyable third-person action game with an enjoyable emphasis exploration and satisfying combat

    SEGA's clearly spent a lot of time playing Batman: Arkham Asylum. And that's not necessarily a bad thing. Given the quality of SEGA's most recent Marvel movie...

  • Review Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part II (PlayStation 3)

    Could it be magic?

    Last year EA made the horrendous mistake of bringing Kinect support to Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part I, ignoring PlayStation Move entirely. The result was a predictably sloppy affair – but with the sequel's Move support, surely there's still chance of redemption. Well, no, there isn't. Purge any thoughts of...

  • Review Cars 2: The Video Game (PlayStation 3)

    Cars 2: The Video Game is not the most ambitious of releases, but it achieves much of what it sets out to do

    The game's kart-racing fundamentals are fluid and enjoyable, especially when experienced in multiplayer. With an expansive and likable roster of characters, Cars 2: The Video Game is a decent alternative to Mario Kart, though the game's...

  • Review One Epic Game (PlayStation Minis)

    One Epic Game is a well presented, addictive autorunner that manages to present a surprisingly humorous slant on the current state of the video game industry

    Autorunners are all the rage. Popularised by the iOS, the genre can be best identified by having a protagonist that runs from left-to-right at a perpetually increasing speed. In order to...