Star Wars Battlefront II (2005): The Classic That Still Feels Like a War
A big, loud Star Wars sandbox that still understands what “fun multiplayer chaos” means.
Global Warfighter Games.
A big, loud Star Wars sandbox that still understands what “fun multiplayer chaos” means.
After more than a decade on the market, Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Siege continues to prove that tactical shooters can evolve without losing their identity.
There are very few games in history that can claim to still command millions of active players more than two decades after release.
For players who grew up on competitive multiplayer shooters, the server browser is not just a feature. It is a philosophy.
For many players, the return to Gaia has been more than a remake. It has been a reintroduction to one of the most influential role playing worlds ever created.
The hero shooter genre has gone through several distinct phases over the past decade.
For decades, PC and console gaming followed largely separate paths. Consoles offered fixed hardware, standardized performance, and simplicity.
For decades, the video game industry revolved around a simple transaction. You bought a game, you owned it, and you played it until something new caught your attention.
For more than two decades, the Resident Evil franchise has existed in a rare space where horror, action, and atmosphere collide in a way few series have managed to replicate.
What does the Epic vs. Google ruling and the cracking of the US app store mean for PC to mobile gaming?
The dust has finally settled on the most chaotic holiday shopping season the first person shooter genre has seen in years.
Some games launch loud, burn bright, and disappear within a year. Others refuse to die.
Skill trees have become one of the most recognizable progression systems in modern games.
There was a time when buying a game felt final in the best possible way. You paid for it, brought it home, and that copy became yours.
In modern games, very few things feel as immediately satisfying as landing a hit.