Interdimensional Vending Machine Review: Surreal SCP-flavored Game With No Real Stakes
If grotesque transformations and Newgrounds-era horror aesthetics sound like your idea of a good time, this $7.99 indie might be for you!
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If grotesque transformations and Newgrounds-era horror aesthetics sound like your idea of a good time, this $7.99 indie might be for you!
Two developers spent four years building a cozy survival game on floating sky islands. The vision is there, but early onboarding is rough.
A modern take on the “creature collection” genre made with a lot of love, only held back by some bugs (not the creature type).
Outplay’s debut is a match-3 roguelike corporate nightmare. After two hours of losing, finding a broken combo feels genuinely incredible.
Monster Theater’s Kickstarter-funded debut is a vibrant hack-and-slash with gorgeous pixel art and one rough edge that’s easy to forgive.
After 40 hours driving across Japan, it’s hard to argue with the result. Forza Horizon 6 is the best the series has ever been.
One dev made a game that sits in-between LSD Dream Emulator and Lethal Company, wrapped in a Y2K aesthetic, and it keeps pulling me in!
A three-person studio just made one of the most genuinely original roguelites in recent memory by combining XCOM-style tactics with rhythm.
Nagai Industries built something genuinely warm here. The question is whether what you get for $19.99 matches what you’re expecting.
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