Cargo Hunters Review: Scraping For Parts In A Brutal Dystopian Sandbox
The world of Cargo Hunters hits you with a gritty, silent atmosphere where every single choice dictates whether you walk away with a hoard of scrap or lose absolutely everything.
The world of Cargo Hunters hits you with a gritty, silent atmosphere where every single choice dictates whether you walk away with a hoard of scrap or lose absolutely everything.
The iconic bubble shooter returns with a vibrant bursting of colorful spheres that aims to swallow up your spare hours. Your screen quickly fills with tactical geometry as you line up shots, bouncing projectiles off walls to clear crowded boards before the clock runs down.
The world is drowning in a bio-hazard disaster, and you are stepping straight into a brilliant, sun-drenched nightmare where retro survival horror clashes head-first with brutal tactical strategy.
Imagine taking the infuriating rhythm of Flappy Bird and smashing it face-first into an aggressive, bullet-filled shoot ’em up.
You wake up completely alone on a fishing boat with a massive debt hanging over your head and absolute zero hand-holding to guide you.
The burning fires of Sanctuary have twisted into something far more sinister, pulling you straight into a dense, decaying world where survival is a brutal, constant grind.
The world is drowning, and you are sailing straight into a brilliant, sun-drenched nightmare where your every choice leaves a permanent scar on the next player’s universe.
The Eldar are stepping out of the shadows and onto your desktop in a way that feels like a massive punch of nostalgia.
Codex Mortis drops you into a grim, top-down 3D world where you aren’t just surviving the horde you are the commander of the dead.
The smell of lead paint and static-heavy CRT monitors is back with a vengeance. Final Liberation: Warhammer Epic 40,000 drops you into a time when strategy games didn’t care about your feelings and “Epic” meant massive scale on a tiny budget.
This feels exactly like those old CD-ROM titles you used to find tucked into the back of a PC magazine, dripping with a very specific kind of mid-90s dread.
The world of Replaced hits you like a brick to the face from the second you boot it up. It’s a moody, pixel-drenched atmosphere that uses isometric camera tricks and diorama-style set pieces to make every frame look like a piece of art.
Dialoop drops you into a voxel-art world where the stakes are high and the visuals are even louder. It’s a match-3 experience that feels like being trapped inside a fruit machine during a massive payout.
Booting up CorgiSpace feels exactly like stumbling upon a dusty, forgotten computer in an attic and finding a library of experimental software.
Candy Rangers is an on-rails shooter adventure where you take control of four quadruplets, Candy, Mint, Lemon, and Plum, to protect their city from invading creatures.
John Carpenter’s Toxic Commando is a co-op first-person shooter that feels like a lost 80s action-horror flick come to life. Developed by Saber Interactive, the game thrusts up to four players into a world overrun by the Sludge God’s undead filth.
Walking into MOUSE: P.I. For Hire feels like stepping directly into a smoke-filled 1930s animation reel where the ink is replaced with gunpowder and grit.
Nutmeg is a massive shot of 90s nostalgia that hits you right in the childhood before you’ve even played a single match.
The Cold War has finally boiled over, and ’83 drops you right into the thick of a NATO versus Warsaw Pact explosion that feels heavy and unforgiving.
Spy Drops is a 3D stealth action title from Rainy Night Creations that serves as a massive love letter to the original Metal Gear Solid.