Review - Fishbowl
James Gregory James Gregory

Review - Fishbowl

Fishbowl is an indie, visual novel game and the first video game from I Miss My Friends Studio; a developer duo of Rhea Gupte and Prateek Saxena who decided to make a video game influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic and other life events. It presents the possibility of being emotionally resonant with everyone due to our shared experience during the pandemic and topic such as depression, self-doubt and cancer.

Read More
Review - Super Meat Boy 3D
James Gregory James Gregory

Review - Super Meat Boy 3D

After spending countless hours as a teenager one hundred percenting the original Super Meat Boy, I was initially hesitant when I heard the announcement of a 3D reimagining of my favourite brutal platformer. It seemed like an impossible task to translate such finely tuned level design into a new perspective.

Read More
Review - Planet of Lana 2: Children of the Leaf
James Gregory James Gregory

Review - Planet of Lana 2: Children of the Leaf

Since their rise in the 2010's, cinematic puzzle-platformers have become an unexpected favourite genre of mine in video games. Often shorter experiences; perfect vessels for emotional and atmospheric games that attempt to synchronise gameplay and story. With the likes of Limbo, Inside, and recently, Reanimal, using the genre for darker horrors, Planet of Lana 2 is a welcome continuation in the beautiful and colourful sci-fi world, Novo, created in the original.

Read More
Review - Demon Tides
James Gregory James Gregory

Review - Demon Tides

2026 feels like another rejuvenation cycle for 3D platformers, as indie developers continue to use their inspirations to invent new takes on the genre. In the late 90s we had Super Mario 64 and Crash Bandicoot, and the early to mid 2000s, Ratchet and Clank, and Jak and Daxter. Whereas, the last two decades gifted us Super Mario Odyssey and Donkey Kong Bananza. But the continued renaissance in the boundary pushing indie scene is what's impressed me. First, we had the excellent Big Hops, and now, Demon Tides.

Read More
Review - Love Eternal
James Gregory James Gregory

Review - Love Eternal

For some reason, I've always gravitated towards difficult precision platformers - the more masochistic the better. From the gravity flipping VVVVVV, to the tense sequences in Super Meat Boy. Straight away, Love Eternal reignites similarities to both, and quickly turns into its own unique hybrid of part hardcore precision 2D platformer, part psychological horror interactive adventure game.

Read More