Game Review: Ash Pines: The Motel (Xbox Series X)
Ash Pines: The Motel is cheap, and it is short, but it is not satisfying at all, and ends in such abrupt fashion, it feels like a bit of a joke.
Ash Pines: The Motel is cheap, and it is short, but it is not satisfying at all, and ends in such abrupt fashion, it feels like a bit of a joke.
Poorly marketed, I don’t blame you if you haven’t heard of Gori: Cuddly Carnage, a hack and slash action-adventure video game developed by Angry Demon Studio and published by Wired Productions.
Developed and published by Leakage Games, Prison Loop is an ‘anomaly’ game that shares a lot in common with the likes of The Exit 8, albeit in a less atmospheric and refined way.
If you’ve played one of these games, you’ve played a hundred of them, and Circus of TimTim does nothing to change up the stale gameplay formula that makes up the majority of stealth horror survival games.
Shadows of the Damned: Hella Remastered isn’t going to win any awards for extra content, it does take a quality game and improve it in several, important ways. It’s a bit a cult classic, awkward with age, but with just enough charm to still be welcome. Grab your Johnson, and ride out.
From developer Brave Giant and publisher Silesia Games comes Let Me Sleep, a simple but addictive 2D point and click puzzle game. Bright, colourful, and quite zany, it’s quite good.
Now I’m no diving expert, but I can promise you that Deep Diving Adventures does not accurately portray the real-life experience of deep-sea diving. Unless the simulator part is how this game’s dullness reflects the real-life dullness of diving?
From Farmind Studio and 100 GAMES comes True Virus, an old-school point and click game with a horror-based story, complex puzzles, and unique visual style.