InfinityWaltz’s Column of Curiosities – November’s Top 3 Underrated Releases
November featured a variety of games that mostly flew under the radar, from puzzles to space shooters to board games about eldritch abominations.
November featured a variety of games that mostly flew under the radar, from puzzles to space shooters to board games about eldritch abominations.
Mars Power Industries Deluxe is a short but sweet puzzle game that’ll have you smiling and scratching your head in equal parts.
The World Next Door combines adventure, puzzles, and social elements into a brief but fun package that’s full of charm.
Exorcise the Demons is occasionally a blast when played with a few friends but suffers from a lot of demons of its own.
Macdows 95 is is a series of brain-teasing puzzles hiding behind the various menu options and programs of an imaginary ’90s-era operating system. Is it worth installing? Read on…
InfinityWaltz is back with a new column highlighting four great underrated indie games from the month of September.
It’s the middle of summer and way too hot, so this month’s top underrated indies are all turn-based so you can cool off between moves.
Bewildebots is a puzzle game for mobile and PC that involves simultaneously ordering around bunches of robots. Read our full review.
Guard Duty is a throwback to the classic point-and-click adventures of the ’90s, favoring humor and charm over difficult puzzles.
The time has finally come to Crush Your Enemies on the Switch! Take control of a barbarian horde as they drink, plunder and destroy everything in their path.
Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes is one of the best multiplayer games out there. How does it hold up on the Switch? Find out in our review!
Primarily geared as a cooperative game, 39 Days to Mars is a point-and-click steampunk space adventure that tasks its players with overcoming a string of puzzles. Read our full review…
Visual Out is a combat-free game of platforming and exploration. Will this journey through a stylized ’80s-flavored computer have you hitting CTRL-ALT-DELETE? Read our full review.
Apocalipsis: Harry at the End of the World is a short but sweet point-and-click adventure inspired visually and thematically be the early Renaissance in general and Dante Alighieri in particular. Is this journey into hell worth taking? Read our review.
Recently ported to the Nintendo Switch, this 2015 game about hunting, deer and arguably religion is nothing if controversial. Is it a tranquil and thoughtful work of art, or a big bucking disappointment?