After a shaky year for the video game industry, we're breaking out this list of the 10 Most Anticipated Games of 2016 to rekindle our hope in future games, knowing there are plenty of excellent titles on the horizon.
Make sure you angle the deflector shield while we make the calculations for the jump to light speed, because we're flying into an asteroid field of crap with the 10 Worst Star Wars Games.
'Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain' won 2015's Best Action Adventure Game honors at last night's Video Game Awards, but creator Hideo Kojima was not there to accept the award... because Konami banned him from attending. Dick move, Konami. Dick move.
'Friday the 13th: The Game' for NES was a... uh, "special" experience. Now, that questionably accurate video game adaptation of a slasher movie is getting a faithful slasher movie adaptation. Huh?
War never changes, but the console and gaming landscape has dramatically over the last seven years. In the time since Fallout 3's release, open-world games have evolved quite a bit thanks to that game's success. New platforms have also emerged, giving developers the resources to make larger, more detailed worlds for players to explore, while adding in the additional graphical benefits new hardware provides. While the rest of the world was moving on at an incredible pace, Bethesda was taking its time with Fallout 4. A proper fourth entry in the series needed to be bigger and better than before, but the wait was excruciating for fans. Though the franchise hasn't come quite as far in the last seven years as we'd hoped, but Fallout 4 is still an impressive piece of work that's not to be missed.
When I was a kid, it was all about Nintendo. And as a Nintendo-playing movie lover, I always gravitated to games based on movies, like Ghostbusters and Ghostbusters II, which were released by a company named Activision. Now Activision Blizzard is the publisher behind some of the biggest franchises in gaming, including Call of Duty, Skylanders, and Guitar Hero and, they announced today, they’re goi
As the world is waiting for Daniel Craig to return to the suit and play our favorite martini-swigging, dame-slaying and bad guy-shooting special agent in Spectre, it's time we look back at 007's 10 best games in order to rank our favorite James Bond missions. As with most license-based franchises, the James Bond series has had its fair share of clunkers over the years, and the good 007 games out there are vastly outnumbered by the mediocre ones. Luckily, a few of them have beaten the curse of licensed games and established themselves as excellent titles in their own right.
Many of the games listed here on the 10 Best NES RPGs were either advanced ports of or heavily inspired by the CRPGs of the early-to-mid 1980s. Many of these Nintendo Entertainment System/Famicom role-playing games would go on to become more popular than the games that inspired them, but this was a pivotal point in time where the gaming scene started to change. Nintendo started to become the dominant hardware developer in terms of home gaming, and the RPG genre started to trickle its way onto the NES. Unfortunately, not every RPG that was made in Japan was able to cross the pond to the United States and vice-versa.