Based on the summer blockbuster of the same name, G-Force lets you control a team of secret agent guinea pigs on a mission to save the world.
Your gun sounds like a cut-price party-popper. The story’s a load of old trash. The action is repetitive. Basically, it’s not worth your time or money.
From the minds behind the Ace Attorney series, this new title is about a ghost trying to help the living and find out how he died.
From the snappy dialogue to the over-use of Ray Parker Jr’s classic song, it’s clear this is built on a bedrock of goodwill toward fans – but, y’know, that doesn’t ...
This new RPG plans to be more inviting to players afraid of the genre and stars the amnesiac Greek demigod Heracles.
This won’t keep you busy for long, but those few hours will at least be entertaining.
Believed forgotten, a sequel to the amazing GBA RPG series is coming to the DS with graphics that maintain the high standards of its history.
This is a superb transfer of the console GTA experience, which is shocking to see on this underpowered system.
This patient was dead on arrival, as it plays like a terrible mash-up of Trauma Center and WarioWare.
The second round of Guitar Hero on the DS is much like the first: same wacky, cramp-inducing controller attachment, same spotty strum detection, but same fundamental rockingness.
More of the same in the portable version of the long-standing slightly-more-than-air-guitar simulation. If that's enough for you, rock on. We'll be over here icing our wrists.
In the big world of games that wish they were Guitar Hero, this one gets credit for putting both guitar and drums on the DS, with varying success.