Tags / adventure

"adventure"

82 BuzzVerdicts across TV Shows (9), Movies (27), PC Games (21), Books (4), Board Games (13), Mobile Games (8)

Avatar: The Last Airbender

4.8

2005 · 3 Seasons · Nickelodeon · Animated Fantasy / Adventure

Avatar: The Last Airbender is one of those rare shows that fully earns its reputation as an all-time great. Across 61 episodes, Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko built a world that feels lived-in and layered, populated it with characters who grow in ways that would be impressive in any medium, and told a war story with the emotional complexity of prestige drama while never forgetting that it was also supposed to be fun. Zuko's arc from villain to hero stands as one of the finest character transformations in television history, animated or otherwise. A handful of filler episodes in the first season and some childish humor are the only real blemishes on a show that gets better with every rewatch and continues to find new audiences nearly two decades after it first aired.

Jaws

4.8

1975 · Steven Spielberg · 124 min · Thriller / Adventure

Jaws is one of those rare films where every piece fits together so tightly that the whole becomes something permanent. John Williams' score does half the work on its own, Spielberg's decision to hide the shark turned a production disaster into a masterclass in suspense, and three perfectly cast leads carry you from a small-town political drama into one of the most gripping survival stories ever filmed. The mechanical shark shows its age when it finally appears in full, and the film asks for patience in its first act that not every modern viewer will want to give. None of that matters much when the total package is this good. Fifty years later, it still makes people think twice before wading past their knees.

Raiders of the Lost Ark

4.8

1981 · Steven Spielberg · 115 min · Action / Adventure

Raiders of the Lost Ark is the kind of movie that people call perfect and then barely get any argument. Steven Spielberg took a love letter to old adventure serials and turned it into something that outclassed everything it was borrowing from. Harrison Ford made Indiana Jones feel completely real, the action sequences still hit harder than most of what comes out today, and John Williams wrote a score that became the sound of adventure itself. The cultural representation has aged poorly, and a few plot logic gaps show on repeat viewings. None of that changes the fact that this is one of the most thrilling, rewatchable, and flat-out fun movies ever put on screen.

Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope

4.8

1977 · George Lucas · 121 min · Sci-Fi / Adventure

Star Wars earned its place at the center of pop culture by doing something deceptively simple: telling a classic good-versus-evil story with more imagination, energy, and visual ambition than anyone had ever put on screen before. John Williams' score alone would justify the film's reputation, but combined with a cast of characters that became permanent fixtures in the cultural vocabulary, it adds up to something that still works nearly five decades later. The dialogue creaks in places, and the story never pretends to be complicated. None of that matters much when the film is this committed to making you feel like a kid watching something impossible happen for the first time.

Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back

4.8

1980 · Irvin Kershner · 124 min · Sci-Fi / Adventure

The Empire Strikes Back took everything the original Star Wars built and pushed it somewhere deeper, darker, and more emotionally ambitious. It contains one of cinema's most famous twists, one of the greatest film scores ever composed, and a final act that leaves its heroes beaten and scattered. Some of that was risky in 1980, and some audiences pushed back against the darker direction. Forty-five years later, those risks are exactly what elevated it. This is the rare sequel that surpassed its predecessor and redefined what a follow-up could accomplish.

The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring

4.8

2001 · Peter Jackson · 178 min · Fantasy / Adventure

Peter Jackson took one of the most beloved novels ever written and turned it into a film that somehow satisfied both longtime fans and newcomers who couldn't tell a hobbit from an elf. The performances are uniformly excellent, the score is all-time great, and the production design set a standard that fantasy films are still chasing more than two decades later. It runs close to three hours and doesn't tell a complete story on its own, which are valid complaints if you're looking for a tidy standalone experience. Most people aren't. They're looking for the beginning of something extraordinary, and that's exactly what this delivers.

The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

4.8

2003 · Peter Jackson · 201 min · Fantasy / Adventure

This is the rare blockbuster that swings for something enormous and connects on almost every level. Over three and a half hours, it delivers battles that set a new standard for scale, emotional payoffs that hit harder than they have any right to, and a musical score that ties it all together into something that feels earned. The ending goes on longer than most people expect, and that's either the final gift or the final test depending on your patience. Twenty years on, it remains the gold standard for how to close out an epic story.

Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood

4.7

2009 · 1 Season · MBS/TBS · Action / Adventure / Dark Fantasy

Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood earns its place among the best anime ever produced through sheer ambition and follow-through. Sixty-four episodes build a world that feels lived-in, populate it with characters worth caring about, and tell a story that respects both its audience and its own rules. The rocky opening stretch and occasional comedy misfires are real flaws, but they're small cracks in something enormous and carefully constructed. This is the rare long-running series where the ending lands as hard as the beginning promises it will.

Jurassic Park

4.7

1993 · Steven Spielberg · 127 min · Sci-Fi / Adventure

Jurassic Park turned six minutes of computer-generated dinosaurs and a collection of full-scale animatronics into one of the most important movies ever made. Spielberg knew exactly how much to show, when to hold back, and how to let John Williams' score do the heavy lifting in between. The human characters don't always match the creatures sharing the screen with them, but the filmmaking on display is so precise and so confident that it barely matters. More than thirty years later, the effects still look better than most of what followed, and the T-Rex breakout sequence still hits as hard as it did opening weekend. This is blockbuster filmmaking at its absolute peak.

The Princess Bride

4.6

1987 · Rob Reiner · 98 min · Fantasy / Adventure / Comedy

The Princess Bride is that rare film where the satire and the sincerity coexist without canceling each other out. It mocks fairy tale conventions while delivering a fairy tale that actually works, carried by a cast firing on every cylinder and a script that never wastes a line. The framing device occasionally interrupts momentum, and the production values show their age, but nothing about this movie has lost a step in nearly four decades. It was made for everyone, and it still plays that way.

Frieren: Beyond Journey's End

4.5

2023 · 2 Seasons · Nippon TV · Fantasy / Adventure / Drama

Frieren: Beyond Journey's End takes the aftermath of a classic fantasy quest and turns it into something quietly extraordinary. It's a story about an immortal elf learning what human connections mean only after the people she traveled with have grown old and died, and that premise delivers emotional weight that most anime can't touch. The deliberate pacing won't work for everyone, and viewers looking for constant action will find themselves waiting. But for those willing to match Frieren's unhurried rhythm, this is one of the most rewarding anime of the decade.

Batman: Arkham City

4.5

2011 · Action / Adventure · PC / Steam

Batman: Arkham City takes everything Arkham Asylum built and expands it into an open world that feels like Gotham's most dangerous playground. The freeflow combat is refined to perfection, the gliding traversal transforms movement into its own reward, and the rogues gallery gets expanded encounters that surpass the original's boss fights. The open world adds freedom without sacrificing the focused pacing that made Asylum special, and the narrative builds to one of gaming's most memorable endings.

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

4.5

1989 · Steven Spielberg · 127 min · Action

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade is the rare third installment that rivals the original. Adding Sean Connery was a stroke of brilliance, shifting the franchise from pure adventure into something warmer without sacrificing the thrills. The comedy occasionally undercuts the stakes, and it hits many of the same beats as Raiders, but the Ford-Connery dynamic elevates everything around it. As a sendoff for the original trilogy, it's about as perfect as anyone could have asked for.

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial

4.5

1982 · Steven Spielberg · 115 min · Sci-Fi / Family / Adventure

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial endures because Spielberg built it around something timeless: a lonely kid who needs a friend. The special effects have aged, and the pacing carries the rhythms of a different era of filmmaking. But the emotional core is bulletproof. Henry Thomas gives one of the great child performances in cinema history, and John Williams' score does things to your heart that four decades haven't diminished. It's a film that earns every tear it asks for.

Chicory: A Colorful Tale

4.5

2021 · Adventure / Puzzle · PC / Steam

Chicory: A Colorful Tale wraps a deeply personal story about self-doubt and creative anxiety inside a painting adventure that anyone can pick up and enjoy. The brush mechanics are inventive and the world is a joy to explore, but it's the emotional honesty that sticks with you long after the credits roll. A few boss encounters feel clunky, and the late game can drag slightly, but this is one of those rare games where the heart behind it shines through every design choice.

The Count of Monte Cristo

4.5

1844 · Alexandre Dumas · 1276 pages · Historical Adventure

The Count of Monte Cristo is one of those rare books that lives up to nearly two centuries of hype. Dumas constructed a revenge plot so intricate and satisfying that it set the template every revenge story has followed since. The length will intimidate, and some of the middle sections require patience as schemes unfold across drawing rooms and dinner tables. But the payoff is extraordinary, and the book's deeper questions about justice, mercy, and whether vengeance actually heals anything give it weight that outlasts the plot mechanics. This is a long commitment that most readers describe as one of the best they've ever made.

Finding Nemo

4.5

2003 · Andrew Stanton · 100 min · Animation / Adventure / Comedy-Drama

Finding Nemo remains one of Pixar's finest achievements, a film that works as a colorful underwater adventure for kids and a surprisingly affecting meditation on parenthood and letting go for everyone else. Dory alone is worth the price of admission. The episodic structure keeps it from building the kind of sustained momentum that Pixar's very best films manage, and a few of the supporting characters fade into the background. But the emotional core, a terrified father learning that love means giving his kid room to fail, hits just as hard on the twentieth viewing as it did on the first.

Ghost of Tsushima

4.5

2020 · Action Adventure · PC / Steam

Ghost of Tsushima is the best samurai game available on PC, and one of the most visually striking open worlds ever built. Sucker Punch crafted a combat system that makes sword fighting feel both deadly and elegant, and the wind-guided exploration strips away the clutter that drags down so many games in the genre. It follows the open-world formula closely enough that fatigue sets in during the back half, and the story takes fewer risks than its setting deserves. But the moment-to-moment experience of riding through autumnal forests, cutting down Mongol patrols, and discovering hidden shrines carries a quality that makes the familiar structure feel fresh. The PC port by Nixxes is excellent, making this the definitive way to play.

God of War (2018)

4.5

2018 · Action-Adventure · PC / Steam

God of War reinvented a franchise by slowing down and growing up. The relationship between Kratos and Atreus carries the entire experience, supported by weighty combat, a stunningly realized Norse world, and a single continuous camera shot that never cuts away. Enemy variety and puzzle design don't reach the same heights as the story and combat, and backtracking through previously visited areas wears thin. But the emotional core of a father learning to connect with his son, set against a mythology that mirrors their struggles, makes this one of the most memorable action games on PC.

Hunter x Hunter (2011)

4.5

2011 · 1 Season · Nippon TV · Action / Adventure / Fantasy

Hunter x Hunter is one of the smartest and most emotionally ambitious action anime ever produced, and the 2011 adaptation by Madhouse does its source material justice at nearly every turn. The Nen power system remains the gold standard for how to make fictional combat feel strategic rather than arbitrary. Its willingness to shift genres across arcs, from adventure to heist thriller to war epic, keeps the show from ever settling into a predictable rhythm. The Chimera Ant arc's pacing will test anyone's patience, and the heavy narration in later episodes is a legitimate frustration. But the payoffs, both emotional and thematic, that the show delivers when it's operating at its peak put it in conversation with the best the medium has produced.

North by Northwest

4.5

1959 · Alfred Hitchcock · 136 min · Thriller

North by Northwest is Alfred Hitchcock at his most purely entertaining, a film that practically invented the template for the globe-trotting thriller. Cary Grant is magnetic, the set pieces remain iconic for good reason, and Ernest Lehman's screenplay balances wit and tension with rare precision. The plot doesn't hold up to scrutiny, and anyone looking for depth will need to look elsewhere. But as a piece of filmmaking craft designed to thrill, charm, and move at speed, it's never been topped.

The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe

4.5

2022 · Adventure / Comedy · PC / Steam

The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe takes one of the smartest games ever made about games and somehow makes it smarter. The narrator remains one of the funniest characters in the medium, the new content doubles down on the meta-commentary without losing the original's sharpness, and the sheer number of paths and endings makes repeated playthroughs consistently surprising. It won't land for everyone, and people who bounced off the original won't find a different game here. But for anyone who appreciates clever writing and games that interrogate what games even are, this is essential.

What Remains of Edith Finch

4.5

2017 · Adventure · PC / Steam

What Remains of Edith Finch is a masterclass in interactive storytelling that crams more creativity into two hours than most games manage in twenty. Every vignette finds a new way to connect what you're doing with your hands to what's happening in the story, and that connection is what elevates it beyond a simple walk through a house. It's short, it's not interested in challenging you mechanically, and it won't change your mind about narrative-focused games if you've already decided they're not for you. But if you're open to a game that treats storytelling as its core mechanic, this is one of the best examples of what the medium can do.

Dune: Part Two

4.5

2024 · Denis Villeneuve · 166 min · Sci-Fi / Adventure

Dune: Part Two is a rare sequel that matches and often surpasses its predecessor. Denis Villeneuve delivers one of the most visually commanding sci-fi films in years, backed by a Hans Zimmer score that practically rewires your nervous system. Austin Butler's villain is a standout, and the film's willingness to lean into its anti-messiah themes gives it real weight. A rushed final stretch and some emotional distance between the audience and its characters keep it just short of flawless, but this is blockbuster filmmaking operating at a level most studios don't even attempt anymore.

Leviathan Wilds

4.5

2024 · 1-4 Players · ~60 min · Cooperative / Boss-Battling Adventure

Leviathan Wilds delivers one of the best cooperative experiences in recent memory by doing something deceptively simple: making movement the entire game. Climbing massive creatures, managing your grip, and choosing how to spend every card in your hand creates a decision space that stays fresh across dozens of sessions. Minor issues with solo mode rules and occasional visual clutter on the maps don't come close to undermining what works here. For co-op fans looking for a game that plays in an hour but thinks like something twice its size, this belongs at the top of the list.

The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

4.5

2002 · Peter Jackson · 179 min · Fantasy / Adventure

No film in this trilogy had a harder job, and few sequels anywhere have delivered this well. It contains what many consider the greatest battle sequence in cinema history, introduced a CGI character that changed the entire film industry, and held three separate storylines together without losing momentum. Adaptation changes will always bother some fans, and the middle chapter structure means it leans on what came before. But this is a film that took enormous creative risks and landed almost all of them.

Ranking of Kings

4.4

2021 · 1 Season · Fuji TV · Fantasy / Adventure / Drama

Ranking of Kings looks like a children's storybook and hits like an emotional freight train. WIT Studio's adaptation of Sosuke Toka's manga follows Bojji, a deaf and seemingly powerless prince, through a fantasy kingdom full of betrayal, hidden agendas, and unlikely kindness. The simple art style hides sophisticated storytelling, and the show's ability to make you cry over characters you've known for minutes is remarkable. Late-season pacing wobbles and an overstuffed cast keep it from sticking every landing, but the emotional core never wavers.

Clank! Legacy: Acquisitions Incorporated

4.4

2019 · 2-4 Players · ~90-120 min · Competitive / Campaign / Legacy

Clank! Legacy: Acquisitions Incorporated is one of the best legacy board game experiences available, combining the satisfying deck-building and push-your-luck tension of Clank! with a narrative campaign that genuinely surprises at every turn. The story carries real momentum across its 10+ game arc, and the permanent changes to the board and rules create a version of the game that feels uniquely yours by the end. Competitive mechanics occasionally clash with the cooperative storytelling, and the physical footprint is demanding. But for groups that can commit to a full campaign, this delivers some of the most memorable moments the hobby has to offer.

Ace Attorney Trilogy (Mobile)

4.4

2017 · Visual Novel / Adventure

The Ace Attorney Trilogy on mobile is one of the best narrative experiences available on a phone. Phoenix Wright's courtroom battles are as gripping now as they were on the DS, and the updated HD art makes the expressive character animations pop on modern screens. The writing is sharp, the mysteries are satisfying to unravel, and the emotional beats hit harder than you'd expect from a game about yelling 'Objection!' at cartoon witnesses. The investigation segments drag compared to the trials, and the touch interface for evidence presentation could be smoother. But three full games with dozens of hours of content, memorable characters, and some of the best comedic writing in gaming history make this an easy recommendation for anyone who reads and enjoys a good mystery.

Batman: Arkham Asylum

4.3

2009 · Action / Adventure · PC / Steam

Batman: Arkham Asylum redefined what superhero games could be by making you actually feel like Batman, from the fluid freeflow combat to the predator stealth rooms to the detective vision that ties it all together. Rocksteady's tight, focused design confines the game to a single night on Arkham Island, and that restraint produces a pacing and atmosphere that the later open-world sequels never quite recaptured. The boss fights are the weakest element, often falling back on generic patterns that don't match the villain encounters' narrative buildup.

Monument Valley 2

4.3

2017 · Puzzle / Adventure

Monument Valley 2 is one of the most beautiful games ever made for a phone, and the mother-daughter story gives it an emotional weight the original never attempted. Every screen looks like a painting, the impossible geometry puzzles are clever without being punishing, and the whole experience flows with a quiet confidence that respects your time. It's over in about two hours, which will frustrate players who want more content for their money. The puzzles are also easier than the first game, trading challenge for accessibility. But as a self-contained, ad-free experience that uses the medium to tell a genuinely touching story, it's something special.

Pentiment

4.3

2022 · Adventure / RPG · PC / Steam

Pentiment is a murder mystery set in a Bavarian abbey during the 16th century, and it's unlike anything else in Obsidian's catalog. The illuminated manuscript art style is breathtaking, the historical detail is meticulous, and the branching narrative gives your choices real weight across a story that spans decades. It demands patience and a love of reading, which will narrow its audience considerably. But for players willing to meet it on its terms, Pentiment is one of the most distinctive narrative games in years.

Terraria (Mobile)

4.3

2013 · Action / Adventure / Sandbox

Terraria on mobile delivers a staggering amount of content for a premium price, with hundreds of hours of mining, building, fighting, and exploring packed into a game that fits in your pocket. The 1.4 Journey's End update brought the mobile version to near-parity with PC, and cross-platform multiplayer with other mobile players adds a social dimension that extends the experience further. Touch controls work better than expected but still can't match the precision of a controller or mouse, making that the one persistent compromise in an otherwise excellent port.

The Hobbit

4.3

1937 · J.R.R. Tolkien · 310 pages · Fantasy

The Hobbit built the foundation for modern fantasy literature, and nearly ninety years later it still holds up as one of the most charming adventure stories ever written. Tolkien's world-building is extraordinary, his prose paints vivid pictures without ever trying too hard, and Bilbo Baggins remains one of fiction's most relatable heroes. The children's-book tone and episodic pacing won't work for every adult reader, and the complete absence of female characters is impossible to overlook. But as an invitation into Middle-earth, and as a story about finding courage you didn't know you had, it continues to earn its place on the shelf.

It Takes Two

4.3

2021 · Co-op Action Adventure · PC / Steam

It Takes Two is the most inventive co-op game in years, packed with so many ideas that it makes other collaborative experiences feel conservative by comparison. Hazelight Studios crammed a staggering variety of mechanics into a single game, and nearly all of them land well enough to keep both players engaged. The story stumbles where it should soar, the tone bounces between kid-friendly and surprisingly dark, and some levels overstay their welcome. But as a shared experience between two people, there's almost nothing else like it. That's what won it Game of the Year, and that's what people remember.

Mage Knight

4.3

2011 · 1-4 Players · ~120-240 min · Solo / Competitive Adventure

Mage Knight is a towering achievement in solo board game design, a dense fusion of deck building, exploration, and tactical combat that rewards patience and careful planning like few other games on the market. It asks an enormous amount from its players: hours of time, careful study of its rules, and a tolerance for complexity that borders on academic. In return, it offers a strategic depth that reveals new layers after dozens of plays and a sense of accomplishment when everything clicks that is hard to find anywhere else. This is not a game for everyone, but for the audience it serves, nothing else comes close.

Tunic

4.3

2022 · Action Adventure · PC / Steam

Tunic is a game about discovery, and it delivers on that promise better than almost anything in its genre. The in-game instruction manual, the hidden paths, the language you gradually decode: all of it creates a sense of genuine wonder that's hard to find elsewhere. Combat can frustrate, and the hands-off approach to guidance will lose some players entirely. But for those who click with its philosophy of figuring things out for yourself, Tunic offers the kind of secrets-within-secrets experience that rewards curiosity like few games do. Andrew Shouldice spent seven years building this, and every hidden corner reflects that dedication.

Dune: Part One

4.3

2021 · Denis Villeneuve · 156 min · Sci-Fi / Adventure

Dune: Part One is a technical triumph that treats science fiction like it deserves the biggest canvas Hollywood can offer. Denis Villeneuve built a world so convincing you can practically feel the sand in your teeth, backed by a score and sound design that won Oscars for good reason. It stumbles where the source material forced a difficult choice, delivering half a story instead of a whole one, and the emotional register runs cooler than the material probably needed. Those are real limitations. But the sheer craft on display here set a new bar for what science fiction filmmaking could look and sound like, and the ambition alone makes it worth your time.

Up

4.3

2009 · Pete Docter, Bob Peterson · 96 min · Animation / Adventure

A film defined by the best ten minutes Pixar has ever produced, followed by an adventure that never quite reaches the same height. That opening sequence earns its place among the most emotionally powerful moments in animation, and the score alone justifies watching it twice. The adventure half is fun, colorful, and occasionally thrilling, even if it settles into more familiar territory. What saves the whole thing is Carl's emotional arc, which gives the action real stakes and real heart. It's a very good movie that happens to contain a great one inside it.

Star Wars: Episode VI - Return of the Jedi

4.2

1983 · Richard Marquand · 131 min · Sci-Fi

Return of the Jedi delivers one of cinema's most emotionally powerful climaxes through the redemption of Darth Vader, and its three-pronged finale remains a technical achievement. The Ewoks and a lighter tone prevent it from matching the heights of its predecessor, but as a conclusion to one of film's great trilogies, it earns its place through sheer emotional payoff.

Sleeping Gods

4.2

2021 · 1-4 Players · 60-120 min · Cooperative / Campaign

Sleeping Gods is the closest any board game has come to delivering a true open-world experience. Its atlas-based exploration gives players genuine freedom to chart their own course, and the branching narrative rewards curiosity with stories that feel handcrafted rather than procedural. Combat can wear thin over long sessions, and the icon density creates a steep initial learning curve, but for players who prioritize narrative and discovery over mechanical crunch, this is one of the most memorable campaign experiences available. Ryan Laukat created something special here.

Dave the Diver

4.2

2023 · Adventure RPG / Management Sim · PC / Steam

Dave the Diver is a charming mashup of ocean exploration and sushi restaurant management that keeps finding new ways to surprise you. The loop of diving for ingredients by day and serving customers by night is addictive in a way that sneaks up on you, and the game constantly introduces new systems to keep things fresh. Some of those systems land better than others, and the pacing stumbles when it forces you to sit through lengthy story sequences instead of letting you play. But the overall package is so warm and inventive that most players blow past the 30-hour mark without realizing it.

Psychonauts 2

4.2

2021 · 3D Platformer · PC / Steam

Psychonauts 2 is a game that leads with imagination and never runs out of it. Double Fine built something that looks, sounds, and feels like nothing else in the platforming genre, and the way it handles its themes of mental health gives the whole experience a warmth that sticks with you. Combat drags the package down a tier, and the difficulty won't push experienced players, but the level design alone makes this essential for anyone who cares about creative game worlds. Sixteen years between sequels, and the studio came back with something better than the original in almost every way.

Nemo's War

4.1

2017 · 1-4 Players · 60-120 min · Cooperative / Adventure

Nemo's War is one of the finest solo board games ever designed, wrapping strategic resource management in a literary adventure that makes every dice roll feel like a narrative choice rather than a random event. The fiddliness of its components and the heavy hand of luck will turn some players away. Those who stay will find a game that tells a different story every session, one shaped as much by their decisions as by fate.

Made in Abyss

4.0

2017 · 2 Seasons · AT-X / Tokyo MX · Adventure / Fantasy / Drama

Made in Abyss creates one of the most compelling fictional worlds in anime history and then dares its characters, and its audience, to keep descending into it. The Abyss itself is a masterwork of environmental storytelling, gorgeous and terrifying in equal measure, with Kevin Penkin's soundtrack elevating every moment of wonder and dread. The show's willingness to inflict real suffering on its young protagonists gives the adventure genuine stakes but also pushes into territory that many viewers find deeply uncomfortable. Whether that discomfort represents brave storytelling or unnecessary provocation depends on your tolerance and your trust in the narrative. For those who can engage with it on its own terms, this is an unforgettable piece of anime that stays with you long after you stop watching.

Tomb Raider (2013)

4.0

2013 · Action / Adventure · PC / Steam

The 2013 Tomb Raider reboot successfully reinvented Lara Croft as a vulnerable survivor forced to become a fighter, grounding the franchise in a gritty realism that made the action feel consequential. The island setting is excellent, the progression from terrified castaway to confident combatant is compelling, and the setpiece moments deliver genuine spectacle. The survival elements are abandoned too quickly in favor of standard cover shooting, and the ludonarrative dissonance between Lara's distress and her body count is hard to ignore.

Rise of the Tomb Raider

4.0

2015 · Action / Adventure · PC / Steam

Rise of the Tomb Raider improves on the 2013 reboot in nearly every mechanical dimension: bigger tombs, better crafting, more open exploration areas, and combat that offers stealth as a genuine primary approach. The Siberian setting provides stunning environmental variety, and the challenge tombs finally deliver the puzzle-solving that the franchise name demands. The narrative is less compelling than the origin story it follows, and Lara's character development plateaus after the strong foundation the reboot established.

Guardian Tales

4.0

2020 · Action RPG / Adventure

Guardian Tales is the mobile RPG that nobody expected to have one of gaming's best stories, hiding an emotionally devastating narrative behind a cheerful pixel art exterior filled with pop culture references and Zelda-inspired puzzles. The adventure mode is genuinely excellent, the gacha is generous enough to sustain free play, and the tonal shift from comedy to tragedy is one of mobile gaming's greatest surprises. The PvP endgame skews pay-to-win, and the pixel art style, while charming, obscures the production quality from potential players.

The Hidden Fortress

4.0

1958 · Akira Kurosawa · 139 min · Adventure / Comedy

Akira Kurosawa's 1958 adventure comedy is his most purely entertaining film, a rousing tale of two bickering peasants, a fierce general, and a disguised princess trying to smuggle gold through enemy territory. It's the film that directly inspired Star Wars, and watching it, you can see exactly where George Lucas found his template. The humor lands, the action thrills, and Mifune commands every scene he's in. It lacks the depth of Kurosawa's masterworks, but as sheer crowd-pleasing cinema, it delivers.

Into the Wild

4.0

1996 · Jon Krakauer · 224 pages · Nonfiction

Jon Krakauer's account of Chris McCandless and his fatal journey into the Alaskan wilderness remains one of the most debated nonfiction books of the past thirty years. It is a gripping, well-researched story told by a writer who clearly sees something of himself in his subject. The book's greatest achievement is that it refuses to settle the central question: was McCandless a brave idealist or a reckless fool? Krakauer presents the evidence and lets readers argue, and three decades later, they're still arguing.

Oxenfree

4.0

2016 · Narrative Adventure · PC / Steam

Oxenfree is a masterclass in interactive dialogue, wrapped in a supernatural mystery that's creepy, human, and surprisingly moving. Its real-time conversation system makes every interaction feel natural in a way that most narrative games don't even attempt. The characters talk like actual teenagers, the radio mechanic adds a tactile layer to the supernatural elements, and the branching paths give you real reasons to play through more than once. Gameplay beyond the dialogue is limited, and some players will find the pacing too leisurely. But as a narrative experience that trusts its writing and respects its characters, Oxenfree punches well above its weight.

Leo's Fortune

4.0

2014 · Platformer

Leo's Fortune is a gorgeous platformer that proves premium mobile games can compete with anything on console or PC when it comes to visual polish. The physics-based controls feel wonderful, the hand-crafted levels are consistently inventive, and the lack of ads or microtransactions means the experience is pure from start to finish. It's over in about two hours, and that brevity stings for a paid game, even at a modest price point. But those two hours contain some of the finest platforming available on a touchscreen, wrapped in visuals that still impress years after release. If you measure games by the quality of their best moments rather than their total runtime, Leo's Fortune punches well above its weight.

Paleo

4.0

2020 · 2-4 Players · 45-60 min · Cooperative

Paleo is a cooperative game that gets the fundamentals right. It resists quarterbacking, creates genuine tension through its push-your-luck exploration, and offers strong variety through its modular design. The Kennerspiel des Jahres recognition is well earned. Luck plays a bigger role than some cooperative fans will be comfortable with, and the surprise factor that drives early sessions fades with familiarity. But for groups who enjoy cooperative challenges that play in under an hour and want something that feels different from the standard fare, Paleo delivers a prehistoric adventure worth taking.

Firewatch

4.0

2016 · Adventure · PC / Steam

Firewatch is a game about two people talking to each other over walkie-talkies in the Wyoming wilderness, and it somehow turns that into one of the most memorable narrative experiences on PC. The voice acting and dialogue carry the entire thing, the art style has aged beautifully, and the sense of place is as good as anything in the genre. Its ending divides people for a reason, and the short runtime limits its replay value, but the four to five hours it takes to complete leave a lasting impression. If you care about characters and atmosphere more than mechanics, this is an easy recommendation.

Naruto

4.0

2002 · 2 Series (Naruto + Shippuden) · TV Tokyo · Action / Adventure / Fantasy

Naruto tells a sprawling story about an outcast kid who refuses to give up, and at its best, that story produces some of the most emotionally powerful moments in anime history. The early arcs and the peak stretches of Shippuden combine strong character writing, inventive combat, and themes about empathy and pain that hit harder than anything the genre's surface-level reputation would suggest. Hundreds of filler episodes, inconsistent female character development, and a final act that stumbles under its own ambition are real costs of admission. But the moments that work, and there are many, have a way of sticking with you for years. Few anime have meant as much to as many people, and that lasting resonance is earned.

One Piece

4.0

1999 · 21 Seasons · Fuji TV · Adventure / Fantasy / Action

One Piece is an anime built on ambition, and across more than 1,100 episodes it delivers on that ambition more often than it doesn't. The world Eiichiro Oda created is among the richest in fiction, and the bonds between the Straw Hat crew carry a kind of emotional weight that few animated series have matched. Pacing problems and inconsistent production quality hold back the anime adaptation from matching the heights of its source material, and the sheer episode count will scare off anyone who isn't ready for a serious commitment. For those willing to take the voyage, though, there's a reason One Piece has captivated audiences for over two decades and shows no signs of slowing down.

Sky: Children of the Light

4.0

2019 · Social Adventure

Sky: Children of the Light is a rare mobile game that prioritizes beauty, emotion, and human connection over competition and challenge. Its seven realms are among the most visually striking environments on any phone, and the orchestral soundtrack elevates the whole experience into something that feels closer to art than a typical free-to-play title. The daily candle grind and time-limited cosmetics create real friction for long-term players, and anyone looking for mechanical depth will bounce off quickly. But as a peaceful, shareable adventure that rewards curiosity and kindness, Sky occupies a space almost nothing else on mobile even attempts to fill.

Hugo

3.9

2011 · Martin Scorsese · 126 min · Adventure / Drama / Family

Hugo is Martin Scorsese making a children's film that doubles as an argument for why cinema matters, and the result is something too unusual to fit neatly into any category. The 3D cinematography is among the best ever produced, Paris in the 1930s is rendered with genuine wonder, and the film's emotional payoff around the history of early filmmaking is surprisingly powerful. The first half struggles with pacing as it establishes its clockwork mystery, and younger audiences may find the extended love letter to silent cinema more educational than exciting. It's a beautiful, heartfelt, slightly uneven film that finds Scorsese operating far outside his comfort zone with more success than he's often given credit for.

Astroneer

3.9

2019 · Sandbox / Adventure · PC / Steam

Astroneer is a colorful, low-stress space sandbox that shines brightest when you're exploring alien planets with friends. The terrain deformation system is endlessly fun, the visual style is charming, and the sense of discovery across multiple worlds keeps pulling you forward. Solo play can feel aimless without a narrative thread, and the late game loses some of its magic once exploration gives way to repetitive resource chains. But as a co-op adventure for players who want to build, explore, and mess around on alien worlds, few games match its vibe.

Avatar

3.8

2009 · James Cameron · 162 min · Sci-Fi / Adventure

Avatar is a film that did something nobody else could do in 2009 and told a story that everyone had already heard. James Cameron's technical ambition created a world so convincing that audiences showed up in record numbers just to exist inside it for a few hours, and no amount of narrative familiarity could undercut that achievement. The plot follows well-worn grooves without apology, and the characters serve the spectacle more than the other way around. What remains is a visual landmark that proved cinema could still deliver an experience you couldn't get anywhere else. The world-building carries it. The story rides along.

Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order

3.8

2019 · Action-Adventure · PC / Steam

Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order is a satisfying action-adventure that successfully blends souls-like combat with metroidvania exploration in a Star Wars setting. The story gives players a compelling protagonist in Cal Kestis, the level design rewards curiosity, and the lightsaber combat, while not as precise as its inspirations, captures the fantasy of being a Jedi better than most games have managed. Technical performance issues on PC and a reward structure that leans too heavily on cosmetics hold it back from the top tier. But as a singleplayer Star Wars experience focused on exploration and combat rather than microtransactions, it delivered exactly what fans had been asking for.

Wonder Woman

3.8

2017 · Patty Jenkins · 141 min · Action / Adventure / Fantasy

Wonder Woman succeeds as an origin story and as an action film for roughly two-thirds of its runtime, buoyed by Gal Gadot's magnetic presence and a handful of sequences that rank among the best the superhero genre has produced. The sincerity of its message lands, the World War I setting provides freshness, and the chemistry between its leads carries slower stretches with ease. Then the final act arrives and trades everything distinctive about the film for a CGI battle against a poorly realized villain. It's a frustrating stumble because everything before it was working so well.

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Movie)

3.8

2005 · Mike Newell · 157 min · Fantasy / Adventure / Drama

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire is the movie that grew the franchise up, introducing real stakes, real danger, and the first PG-13 rating in the series. The Triwizard Tournament provides a thrilling structure, and the graveyard sequence where Voldemort finally appears in the flesh is one of the most powerful scenes in any Potter film. But the cost of adapting the longest book in the series into a single movie is felt everywhere, from compressed subplots to a middle act that lurches between moody adolescent drama and tournament spectacle without always finding the right balance. It's a film of extraordinary peaks surrounded by noticeable compromises.

Shadow of the Tomb Raider

3.8

2018 · Action / Adventure · PC / Steam

Shadow of the Tomb Raider concludes the reboot trilogy with the best tombs, the best stealth, and the weakest combat in the series. The challenge tombs finally deliver elaborate multi-stage puzzles worthy of the franchise name, the jungle and underwater environments are stunning, and the stealth mechanics let Lara become genuinely terrifying in ways the previous games only hinted at. The narrative stumbles with a tone-deaf treatment of indigenous cultures, the combat encounters are fewer and less satisfying, and the conclusion to Lara's character arc feels undercooked after three games of buildup.

Batman: Arkham Knight

3.8

2015 · Action / Adventure · PC / Steam

Batman: Arkham Knight delivers the most visually stunning Gotham City ever rendered and adds the Batmobile as a major gameplay pillar, but the vehicle's omnipresence in puzzles, combat, and boss fights transforms what should be a supplementary tool into an overused crutch. The on-foot combat and predator rooms remain excellent, the narrative tackles Batman's psychology with genuine ambition, and the Arkham Knight identity mystery provides strong dramatic fuel even if experienced players guess the reveal early.

Infinity Nikki

3.8

2024 · Adventure / Fashion

Infinity Nikki combines open-world exploration with fashion design in a surprisingly ambitious package that looks more like a console RPG than a mobile game. The world is gorgeous, the outfit collection is addictive, and the platforming offers genuine fun. The gacha system gates the best outfits behind spending, and the gameplay loop beyond collection and exploration is thin, but as a casual adventure with stunning production values, it's a standout in the mobile space.

Grounded

3.8

2022 · Survival / Adventure · PC / Steam

Grounded takes the 'Honey, I Shrunk the Kids' fantasy and turns it into a capable survival game with a surprisingly engaging world to explore. The backyard setting gives familiar survival mechanics a fresh coat of paint, and the creature encounters deliver genuine tension when a wolf spider rounds a corner. Co-op with friends is where it truly comes alive, but the story underwhelms, the late game becomes a grind, and solo play exposes how much the design leans on having teammates. A fun survival adventure that's best shared.

Clank! In! Space!

3.8

2017 · 2-4 Players · ~60-90 min · Competitive / Deck Building

Clank! In! Space! takes the already entertaining deck-building adventure formula and launches it into orbit with a modular board, expanded card market, and tighter thematic integration. The push-your-luck tension of the clank bag remains the star of the show, and the variable board setup gives this entry more replay value than its predecessor. Longer turns and some forced humor keep it from universal acclaim, but for groups who enjoyed the original Clank! and want more room to explore, this sequel delivers.

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

3.7

2002 · Chris Columbus · 161 min · Fantasy / Adventure / Family

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets is the franchise entry that tried hardest to capture every page of its source material, and that devotion is both its greatest charm and its most persistent problem. At 161 minutes, it's the longest film in the series, and much of that runtime goes to scenes that are fun but narratively unnecessary. The young cast continues to grow into their roles, the mystery at its center is compelling, and the groundwork it lays for the rest of the series is more important than most fans realize. But the pacing drags in ways that the other films learned to avoid, and Columbus's play-it-safe direction keeps the movie from reaching the heights that later installments would hit.

Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom

3.7

1984 · Steven Spielberg · 118 min · Action

Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom is the black sheep of the original trilogy, and that's both its weakness and its strange appeal. Spielberg pushed the franchise into darker territory than anyone expected, delivering set pieces that remain thrilling four decades later while wrapping them in a tone that still makes audiences uneasy. The cultural representation is a genuine problem that can't be handwaved away. Willie Scott tests patience in ways Short Round never does. But the mine cart chase is still one of the great action sequences in cinema, and the film's willingness to go places Raiders wouldn't is more interesting than it gets credit for.

Avatar: The Way of Water

3.5

2022 · James Cameron · 192 min · Sci-Fi / Adventure

Avatar: The Way of Water is James Cameron proving once again that nobody builds a visual spectacle like he does, while also proving that his storytelling instincts haven't evolved much since 2009. The underwater sequences represent a genuine leap in what digital filmmaking can achieve, and the family dynamics give the film more emotional texture than its predecessor. But the three-hour-plus runtime strains against a plot that doesn't have enough narrative momentum to justify it, and the villain problem from the first film returns in a different skin. It's a gorgeous, uneven experience that works best when it stops trying to advance its story and just lets you exist in the water.

Eden's Gate: The Reborn

3.5

2017 · Edward Brody · 460 pages · LitRPG

Eden's Gate: The Reborn is an accessible, fast-paced LitRPG that captures the feel of being dropped into a living MMORPG and having to figure things out. The NPC interactions and world-building carry the book past its rougher edges, and there's a genuine enthusiasm for gaming culture that comes through on every page. The writing has technical stumbles, the protagonist's competence wobbles at inconvenient moments, and the status screens pile up, but readers who enjoy the trapped-in-a-game premise will find this a solid entry point to the subgenre.

Mice and Mystics

3.5

2012 · 1-4 Players · ~90 min · Cooperative

Mice and Mystics is a storybook adventure that succeeds on charm and narrative more than mechanical depth. The writing carries the experience, turning a simple dice-and-combat framework into something families look forward to returning to each session. Repetitive encounters and heavy dice dependence limit its appeal for groups seeking tactical challenge. But as a shared storytelling experience that younger players can fully participate in, it fills a gap that very few games even attempt.

ISS Vanguard

3.5

2023 · 1-4 Players · ~90-120 min · Cooperative / Campaign

ISS Vanguard delivers one of the most ambitious campaign narratives in board gaming, with colorful alien worlds and branching storylines that keep you invested across dozens of sessions. The planetary exploration phase is thrilling when the dice cooperate, but the ship management phase drags, the randomness can snowball in frustrating directions, and the mechanical depth doesn't always match the narrative ambition. It's a game that will thrill you one session and test your patience the next, and whether that tradeoff works depends entirely on how much you value story over systems.

HeroQuest

3.5

2021 · 2-5 Players · 60-90 min · Cooperative / One vs Many

HeroQuest is the granddaddy of dungeon crawlers, and the 2021 Avalon Hill reprint proves the formula still works for the audience it was always meant to serve. The accessible rules, excellent miniatures, and Game Master dynamic create an entry point into dungeon crawling that no modern competitor has matched for sheer approachability. Outdated mechanics and dice-dependent combat keep it from competing with the depth of current genre leaders. But as a gateway to fantasy adventure gaming, especially for families and groups new to the hobby, HeroQuest remains a thoroughly fun experience that earns its legendary status.

Champions of Midgard

3.5

2015 · 2-4 Players · ~60-90 min · Competitive

Champions of Midgard is often described as 'Lords of Waterdeep with dice combat,' and that comparison captures both its appeal and its limitation. The Viking theme provides satisfying framing for a worker placement game where your recruited warriors fight monsters through dice rolling, and the push-your-luck sea voyages add tension that pure euros lack. The dice combat can feel swingy in ways that undermine strategic planning, and the base game's worker placement options are somewhat limited before expansions.

Oceanhorn: Monster of Uncharted Seas

3.5

2013 · Action-Adventure

Oceanhorn is a competent action-adventure that found its perfect home on mobile before spreading to consoles where it struggled to hold its own. The visuals still impress for a game that started on phones, the music is unexpectedly good, and the core loop of exploring islands and collecting items scratches a particular itch. But simple combat, basic puzzles, and on-rails sailing prevent it from ever becoming more than an echo of its obvious inspiration. On a phone, with the right expectations, it's a solid way to spend eight or so hours. Measured against its aspirations, it falls short.

The Revenant

3.5

2015 · Alejandro González Iñárritu · 156 min · Adventure / Drama / Western

The Revenant is a film you respect more than you enjoy, and that's both its greatest strength and its most persistent problem. Emmanuel Lubezki's natural-light cinematography is among the most beautiful work ever committed to a major studio release, and Leonardo DiCaprio's physical commitment to the role is undeniable. The story underneath all that visual grandeur is simpler than it needs to be for a two-and-a-half-hour film, and the pacing tests your patience in ways the survival sequences don't always justify. It's a remarkable piece of filmmaking that works better as an experience than as a story.

Clank! A Deck-Building Adventure

3.5

2016 · 2-4 Players · 30-60 min · Competitive / Deck Building

Clank! takes the familiar deck-building formula and drops it into a dungeon where every card you play might wake the dragon. The push-your-luck tension is real, the rules are accessible enough to teach in ten minutes, and the clank mechanism gives the whole thing a thematic heartbeat that pure card games lack. Luck from the dragon bag and occasional player elimination hold it back from the top tier, but this is a crowd-pleasing design that earns its place on the shelf.

Forbidden Desert

3.5

2013 · 2-5 Players · 45 min · Cooperative Strategy

Forbidden Desert is a sharp cooperative game that punches above its price tag and teaches in minutes. The shifting sandstorm creates real tension, the variable roles keep every session feeling different, and the challenge level stays honest without becoming cruel. Experienced hobbyists will eventually outgrow it, and the quarterbacking problem never fully goes away. But as a gateway into cooperative gaming or a reliable family night staple, few games at this price point deliver as much.