Humanity since its earliest days has remained fascinated storytelling, is this universal trait the result of chance? Or is a deeper reason, we constantly ask "what if?", and look beyond what we can see for something greater?
Starship Troopers: Extermination has come a long way in a very short time, and while it has been thoroughly overshadowed by Helldivers 2, it is still one of the best Horde survival games on the market.
Funko Fusion is what happens when you take the Lego Games formula and suck all of the fun and charm out of it, resulting in a bland and corporate celebration of B-tier pop culture.
Defender Bros is a decent game in a genre filled with excellent titles. It never had a chance of survival, and while its launch was nothing to write home about, I am sorry to say it's all downhill from here on out.
Project Castaway is a game that no one was asking for, and as such, its poor sales and declining player base should surprise no one.
Duckside is a less polished version of Deadside with bare-bones base building, worse visuals, horrifically bad gunplay and playable ducks.
Over four years after entering early access, Deadside appears stuck in the past, while the rest of the genre has moved on to bigger and better things.
While Ultimate Zombie Defense 2 is a cheap and nasty version of Call of Duty's legendary Zombie mode, that isn't an entirely bad thing.
While Reynatis is not the best JRPG you could play this year, it is still worth a playthrough for fans of the genre, even with highly anticipated JRPGs on the horizon.
With the launch of 63 Days, Destructive Creations takes another step away from its past in an effort to cement itself as a major player in the Real-Time Tactic genre.