Giant Bomb
Reviews
646 reviewsSine Mora is a marvelous-looking scrolling shooter with a ton of attention to detail, though some core gameplay foibles can grate on your nerves.
The Vita version of Ridge Racer is light on content, and the vast majority of what's actually here has appeared in previous Ridge Racer games.
Ninja Gaiden 3 is little more than a shadow of the games that came before it.
Street Fighter X Tekken starts out with some amazingly fun updates to the classic Capcom style, but it's a real shame that the online mode is so awkward.
I Am Alive starts with an exciting premise, but it's hard to imagine a wider gulf between the promise of its ideas and the reality of its execution.
SSX is an intriguing mix of old and new that doesn't always pan out, but the absurdist snowboarding gameplay remains as thrilling as ever.
You may not be the kind of person who should play Asura's Wrath at all, but if you are, you're in for one hell of a weird ride.
EA Sports’ first earnest shot at tennis is competent, familiar, and wholly inessential.
Rhythm Heaven Fever's catchy tunes and surprisingly varied two-button gameplay combine into an experience that's as wonderfully silly as it is frequently challenging.
Alan Wake's downloadable debut features a neat story with a clever twist, but one that sadly outstays its welcome.
Touch My Katamari offers up one distinctly cool new idea for the series while more or less surrounding that idea with the same stuff we've already played to death.
Syndicate gives you a great set of tools that make shooting at the world around you a lot of fun whether you're playing alone or with a team.
Escape Plan never quite breaks out beyond its initial level of promise, but such as it is, it's a decent little puzzler for an OK price.
Warp offers an endearing premise and unique puzzle-solving, but it's held back by some basic mechanical issues.
Electronic Symphony brings a host of great music and beautiful skin designs to the time-tested Lumines formula.
The pieces of a tremendous Wipeout game are present in 2048, but it's hard to look past the game's annoying interface, wicked-long load screens, and underwhelming sense of speed.
The Vita version of Rayman: Origins may lack a few of the mechanical touches of its console brethren, but in terms of sheer beauty and fun, little is lost in translation.
Uncharted: Golden Abyss feels like a made-for-cable version of a proper, big-screen Uncharted adventure.
Super Stardust Delta delivers frantic action and flashy effects at a nice, downloadable price.
The framework of Monolith's new multiplayer shooter might not be wildly original, but its nonsensical humor sure is.