Far Cry has always impressed me, from the feral roots of Instincts on the original Xbox to the lush, open world of Far Cry 2, and the crazy but effective antagonists in Far Cry 3 and 4.
I've always enjoyed a good tower-defense title, but those that have really stood out are the few that merge other genres.
The Monster Hunter franchise has been around for 14 years.
Flying around and exploring the landscape sounds like a tranquil experience.
The Vanishing of Ethan Carter may have been around for three years, but it has finally arrived on the Xbox One, along with full 4K support and a new free roam mode.
Electronic Arts might be the ice hockey kings, but they've not offered much to arcade fans since the 3 on 3 NHL Arcade, in 2009.
Back in 2008, de Blob became a small hit on the Nintendo Wii.
Outcast, originally released in 1999, was at the cutting edge of 3D gaming. It was well received by gamers and critics like.
In 1993, Electronic Arts released Mutant League Football (MLF), which became a cult hit.
It wasn't that long ago that Shadow of Mordor took the gaming world by storm.
Big Ben Interactive return once again with WRC 7.
Travellers Tales have been bringing us quality Lego titles for 12 years.
Digerati have a track record for finding little gems.
From Prison Break to The Great Escape, it seems that may of us love the idea of a carefully constructed plan to escape a prison.
Over the last five years, I've reviewed a number of shoot 'em up games.
You would be forgiven for expecting little from a branded game based on a movie.
AereA is a musical-themed action RPG from Soedesco.
Micro Machines have been under our feet and around the living room since 1976, but it was 1991 when gamers got their hands on them.
Nex Machina offers fast action, projectiles covering the screen and hundreds of robots to destroy. Without worrying too much about backstory, this is pure arcade action.
Tour de France first appeared as an Xbox Live arcade game back in 2009.