![]() When the King of Bunnyland and his daughters are captured by alien invaders, it’s up to the Royal Combat Mecha Usagi to defeat the enemy and bring them back. QUByte Classics: Zero Tolerance Collection by PIKO ($9.99) This was Video System’s first shooter, and while it is a bit rough around the edges in places it’s a fun enough example of the genre to be worth playing. QUByte has another batch of games from the folks at PIKO for us. This time it’s the wildly ambitious Genesis/Mega Drive first-person shooter Zero Tolerance. You get the original game, the follow-up Zero Tolerance Underground, and an unlockable demo of the unreleased sequel Beyond Zero Tolerance. If you weren’t into gaming at the time or just don’t remember, the idea of doing a first-person shooter on the stock Genesis hardware was absolutely bananas. Zero Tolerance did it, and that is an impressive feat. Is it something you would want to play in 2022? Well… that’s what my review will help you with, I guess. KEMCO doing a game that just isn’t the usual fare is always interesting. Together with developer EXE-CREATE, the company is trying its hand at the popular deckbuilding roguelite concept. It features five different labyrinth themes, more than three hundred different cards, tons of loot, and more. I doubt Slay the Spire has anything to fear from this, but it’s nice to see a pair of companies that tend to be defined by the extremely deep rut they’ve been in try something new. ![]() If you like the first Shenmue but didn’t like all that pesky walking around town, talking to people, solving mysteries, playing SEGA games in the arcade, fighting people, or picking up objects and looking at them from all angles, this might be for you. That is to say, this is a game about driving a forklift. You will use your forklift to do forklift things. There’s a mobile version of it you can try out for free if you like before settling on a purchase here. I’ll be doing a review of this somewhat soon if you need all the hot details. Make me! An odd puzzler where the core mechanic is that the rules change on every level. You have to figure them out through trial and error. Once you’ve got them sorted, you draw a line that meets all the requirements, and you’re off to the next level. There are more than one hundred in total to play, and some of them are real head-scratchers. One for the puzzle fan who wants something novel. Railways ($4.99)Ī little puzzle-action type game where you need to drag the trains to the right tracks in order to pick up passengers and keep things flowing properly. It has a minimalist vibe to it, following in the footsteps of fellow transportation management game Mini Metro, but it’s a bit more action-oriented. ![]() ![]() You get thirty levels to play, plus a couple of extra modes to keep the fun rolling after that. Trying to collect passengers while avoiding collisions is certainly demanding in an enjoyable way, and that reasonable price makes it all the more enticing. Japanese Nekosama Escape the Local Train ($9.99)Īnother in the series of Japanese Nekosama escape games. This one is set on a local train, which is naturally filled with cats acting like people in very suspicious ways. Solve the puzzles and find your way out before your clothes start to smell like pee.
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