Review: Three Fourths Home
Less “game” than multimedia short story, Three Fourths Home is a beautiful but bleak, artful exploration of family drama.
Less “game” than multimedia short story, Three Fourths Home is a beautiful but bleak, artful exploration of family drama.
A new two-man studio from Cologne updates the text adventure with cinematic sound and voice acting.
Create various snow people by crafting their parts from the fluffy white stuff below. Roll up too much snow, and you might have a problem. Read our review:
Transform your druids into wolves, bears, eagles and more in A Druid’s Duel from indie developer Thoughtshelter Games – a clever turn-based strategy game.
Drive to Hell is a no-nonsense twin stick shooter. Drive through waves of demons and avoid their projectiles on your journey to the fabled end destination.
Tallowmere is a Rogue-like RPG platformer from indie developer Chris McFarland – read our full review…
Dodging and racing through space lanes to get pizza delivered on time! An indie game by Alex Jedraszczak , read out full review of Pizzarian…
A mildly amusing tribute to retro computer RPGs, Pixel Heroes: Byte & Magic is fun in small doses.
Progressive rock guitar meets whimsical papercut insects in Ephemerid – a magical mayfly story from indie developer SuperChop Games.
Astebreed by Edelweiss, has some issues that bring the game down but it’s still enjoyable if you’re looking for a solid Shoot ‘Em Up to play. Read more…
Lisa from Dingaling studios is a successfully Kickstarted, deliberately ugly RPG-Maker offering inspired by drug abuse, professional wrestling and the apocalypse.
A gentle but challenging cooperative platform puzzler with cute characters and lush backgrounds, Chariot is fun for all ages.
The Fall from Over the Moon games is a short but compelling title that borrows from classic platform adventures as well as literary science fiction.
One Way Heroics from indie developer Smoking WOLF is a turn-based RPG roguelike and a forced scroller. Read our full review…
Based on Inupiaq folklore and even narrated entirely in the Inupiaq language (with subtitles in English), Never Alone (Kisima Ingithchuna) is a gorgeous and unusual approach that works in spite of a few rough edges.