Tags / indie

"indie"

111 BuzzVerdicts across Mobile Games (30), PC Games (73), Movies (8)

Balatro

4.8

2024 · Roguelike Deckbuilder

Balatro takes the familiar language of poker hands and turns it into one of the most compulsive games available on any platform. Its Joker synergy system creates a different puzzle every run, its mobile port is among the best ever made, and its premium price means no ads or energy timers getting between you and the next hand. RNG will occasionally end a promising run through no fault of your own, and late-game strategies can start to converge. But the highs are so high, the feedback so immediate, and the depth so surprising that those complaints barely register against the overall experience.

Factorio

4.8

2020 · Simulation / Strategy · PC / Steam

Factorio is one of the most polished and addictive games ever made in any genre. The factory-building loop is so well-designed that hours disappear without warning, and the mod support ensures the game can be whatever you want it to be. Combat is an afterthought and the visuals won't turn any heads, but neither of those things matters when the core gameplay is this tightly constructed. Wube Software built something that respects your intelligence and your time in equal measure. The Space Age expansion only confirmed what players already knew: this is a developer that understands exactly what makes their game work.

Hades

4.7

2020 · Action Roguelike · PC / Steam

Hades solved the roguelike genre's biggest problem by making failure feel like progress, and it did it with some of the tightest combat and most charming writing in any game of its era. Supergiant Games built a game where dying sends you back to the start but moves the story forward, turning repetition into something you actually look forward to. The weapon variety, the boon system, and the sheer personality packed into every interaction keep runs feeling fresh for far longer than they should. If you've ever bounced off roguelikes because they felt like a grind, this is the one that might change your mind.

Hades II

4.7

2025 · Action Roguelike · PC / Steam

Hades II is the rare sequel that matches its predecessor while carving out its own identity. Supergiant Games expanded the combat, deepened the progression systems, and built a world that rewards dozens of hours of repeat runs without ever feeling like a grind. Melinoe stands on her own as a protagonist, and the Greek mythology framing remains as rich and well-realized as ever. A few weapons land better than others, and the story's ending hasn't satisfied everyone, but those are minor blemishes on a game that earned its place among the best roguelikes ever made. If the original Hades grabbed you, this one won't let go.

Hollow Knight

4.7

2017 · Action Adventure / Metroidvania · PC / Steam

Hollow Knight is a masterclass in what a small team can accomplish with focus and ambition. Team Cherry built a world that rewards every hour you pour into it, backed by combat that stays sharp from the first swing to the last boss. Navigation frustrations and a punishing difficulty curve will drive some players away, and that's a fair response to a game that refuses to hold your hand. But for those willing to get lost in Hallownest, there's nothing else quite like it in the genre. Four free content expansions and a price tag that borders on absurd for the amount of game you get only make the case stronger.

Outer Wilds

4.7

2019 · Exploration Adventure · PC / Steam

Outer Wilds is one of those rare games that does something no other game has done, and does it so well that you'll wish you could forget it just to experience it again. The knowledge-based progression system is brilliant, the solar system is endlessly fascinating to explore, and the story it tells through environmental discovery is among the best in the medium. Some players will bounce off the time loop or the lack of direction, and the controls can frustrate in tight spaces. But for those who click with what Outer Wilds is doing, it's a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Games this original don't come along often.

Stardew Valley

4.7

2016 · Farming Sim / RPG · PC / Steam

Stardew Valley is one of those rare games that gets better the longer you play it, and better still the longer its creator keeps updating it. What started as a solo developer's passion project has become one of the most content-rich, community-supported games on PC. The grind will test some players' patience, and the early hours don't always explain themselves well, but what's waiting on the other side is hundreds of hours of warm, addictive, endlessly rewarding gameplay. Over 50 million copies sold for a reason.

Terraria

4.7

2011 · Action / Adventure · PC / Steam

Terraria has spent over a decade proving that a 2D sandbox can rival anything in the genre for depth, content, and sheer hours of entertainment. Re-Logic's commitment to free updates turned a modest indie release into something with a staggering amount of things to discover, fight, build, and craft. The early game can be opaque and the combat repetitive before things open up, but pushing past those initial hours reveals a game that keeps expanding in every direction. For the price of a fast-food meal, you get one of the best value propositions in all of gaming.

Whiplash

4.7

2014 · Damien Chazelle · 106 min · Drama / Music

Whiplash takes the unlikely subject of a young jazz drummer's education and turns it into one of the most tense, visceral films of its decade. J.K. Simmons delivers a performance that won every major award for a reason, and Miles Teller matches him with raw physical commitment that makes every practice scene feel like a fight for survival. The moral questions it raises about ambition, abuse, and greatness are left deliberately unresolved, which is either its most brilliant quality or its most frustrating one. It's a film people argue about long after the credits roll, and that alone tells you it's doing something right.

The Case of the Golden Idol

4.6

2022 · Puzzle / Mystery · PC / Steam

The Case of the Golden Idol is one of the sharpest detective games ever made, building twelve interconnected murder scenes into a sprawling mystery that rewards careful observation and logical thinking. The deduction system, where you fill in blanks with collected words to reconstruct what happened, is brilliant in its simplicity and deeply satisfying when everything clicks. The art style won't appeal to everyone, and a few cases lean too hard on trial and error. But this is a rare puzzle game that trusts its players completely and never wastes their time.

Celeste

4.6

2018 · Precision Platformer · PC / Steam

Celeste is a precision platformer that manages to be both punishingly hard and deeply compassionate. The controls are some of the tightest in the genre, the level design introduces and discards mechanics at a pace that keeps every chapter feeling fresh, and the story about Madeline's climb hits harder than most people expect from a game about jumping. Assist Mode ensures nobody gets locked out, even if the intended experience involves dying thousands of times. It's a short game that leaves a long impression, and the B-side and C-side chapters ensure that players looking for a real challenge will find one waiting.

RimWorld

4.6

2018 · Simulation / Strategy · PC / Steam

RimWorld is one of those rare games that generates stories worth telling long after you've closed it. The AI storyteller system creates drama, tragedy, and comedy with a consistency that makes every colony feel like a narrative you're co-authoring. Some rough edges in combat accuracy and social systems show their age, and the base game leans on modding to reach its full potential, but the foundation is so strong that thousands of hours barely scratch what's possible. Ludeon Studios built a colony sim that doubles as a story machine, and the community has spent years proving just how deep it goes.

Inside

4.5

2017 · Puzzle Platformer

Inside on iOS is a masterclass in atmospheric game design that loses almost nothing in the transition from console to phone. The visual storytelling is extraordinary, the puzzles build with precision, and the final act delivers one of the most unforgettable sequences in gaming. Touch controls occasionally create friction in timing-heavy sections, and the four-hour runtime means it's over quickly. But those four hours contain more memorable moments than most games manage in forty. It's one of the best games on mobile, period.

Ultrakill

4.5

2020 · First-Person Shooter · PC / Steam

Ultrakill is the best argument in years that the first-person shooter genre still has room to evolve. By fusing the speed of 90s shooters with the depth of character action games like Devil May Cry, Hakita created something that feels entirely new. The style meter, the coin-flipping trick shots, the blood-as-health system, and the sheer variety of combat tools make every encounter a performance. Early Access means it's technically unfinished, but the content already available outclasses most complete shooters on the market. If you have any love for fast, mechanically rich action games, Ultrakill belongs at the top of your list.

Hotline Miami

4.5

2012 · Action · PC / Steam

Hotline Miami is a game that gets under your skin. The violence is extreme, the gameplay is addictive, and the story it tells about both is more thoughtful than the neon-soaked carnage initially suggests. Each floor is a deadly puzzle that rewards aggression, adaptation, and split-second decisions, and the instant restart cycle makes failure feel like part of the process rather than the end of it. It's short, it's brutal, and it's not for everyone. But for those who click with its rhythm, nothing else feels quite like it.

Katana Zero

4.5

2019 · Action Platformer · PC / Steam

Katana Zero is a near-perfect fusion of lightning-fast action and surprisingly deep storytelling. Every level is a violent puzzle solved in seconds, and the narrative that ties them together has more ambition and emotional weight than most indie action games attempt. The difficulty can be brutal, and the story ends on an unresolved note that has left fans waiting for years. But what's here is one of the tightest, most stylish action games on PC. It does everything right except end.

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.

Spiritfarer

4.5

2020 · Management · PC / Steam

Spiritfarer is a game about saying goodbye, and it earns every one of those goodbyes through hours of cooking, building, exploring, and caring for characters who feel like more than quest givers. The management systems are satisfying without being stressful, the hand-drawn animation is gorgeous, and the emotional payoffs hit harder than most games twice its budget. It runs long and the late-game pacing sags, but the moments that matter, and there are many, make it one of the most affecting games of its generation.

Monster Train

4.5

2020 · Roguelike Deckbuilder · PC / Steam

Monster Train does what the best deckbuilders do: it makes every run feel like a puzzle you could have solved differently. The clan system, the three-floor train layout, and the sheer number of card synergies available give it a replayability that keeps players coming back well past the point where they've seen everything once. This is one of the best entries the genre has produced, and it holds up against anything that's come since.

Downwell

4.5

2015 · Action Roguelite

Downwell is one of the most elegantly designed mobile games ever made, wrapping an endlessly replayable roguelite loop inside three simple buttons. The no-IAP model and offline play make it a rare thing: a premium mobile game that respects your time and your wallet. Touch controls take adjustment and the depth ceiling is lower than genre heavyweights, but the core loop is so satisfying that neither complaint lands hard. If you want a mobile game you can pick up for two minutes or two hours, this is it.

Grindstone

4.5

2019 · Puzzle

Grindstone is one of the best puzzle games released in the last decade, on any platform. Its color-matching combat is immediately satisfying and stays compelling across hundreds of levels, backed by art and music that drip with personality. Late-game grinding for crafting resources and occasional difficulty spikes that lean on luck will test patience, and not everyone will push through the back half. But the core loop of carving long chains through a board of angry creatures is so good that it carries the game past its rougher stretches. Capybara Games built something addictive, beautiful, and surprisingly deep, and it deserves every bit of the praise it's received.

Oddmar

4.5

2018 · Platformer

Oddmar is one of the best platformers available on any mobile device. Its hand-drawn animation, tight controls, and inventive level design put it in rare company for the genre on phones and tablets. The 24 levels can be cleared in a few hours, and players hungry for more content will hit the ceiling fast. But every one of those hours is packed with quality that rivals big-budget console platformers, and the free opening chapter makes it easy to find out if the game clicks before spending a dime. Few mobile games feel this polished, and even fewer play this well with touch controls.

Threes!

4.5

2014 · Puzzle

Threes! is one of those rare puzzle games that feels like it was designed by people who cared more about making something beautiful than making money from it. The premium model means no ads, no timers, no energy systems, just a perfectly crafted puzzle waiting in your pocket. Its rules take seconds to learn, but the strategic depth reveals itself over weeks and months of play. If you've only ever played free sliding-number games and wondered what the fuss was about, this is the original, and it's worth every cent.

A Short Hike

4.5

2019 · Adventure · PC / Steam

A Short Hike is a small game that leaves a big impression. In roughly two hours, it delivers more warmth, personality, and genuine fun than many games manage in forty. The movement feels great, the characters are memorable, the island is packed with things to discover, and the whole package has a lightness that's rare in gaming. It's over quickly, and that brevity is the only real complaint anyone levels at it. For the price and the experience, this is about as close to a universal recommendation as games get.

Baba Is You

4.5

2019 · Puzzle · PC / Steam

Baba Is You is one of the most original puzzle games ever made. The mechanic of rewriting the rules by pushing words around is so clever that it makes everything else in the genre feel static by comparison. Difficulty will wall some players out entirely, and the lack of any hint system means getting stuck is a matter of when, not if. But the moments where a solution clicks, where you suddenly see the level in a completely different way, are among the most satisfying feelings in gaming. If you love puzzles, this is essential.

Cuphead

4.5

2017 · Run and Gun · PC / Steam

Cuphead is a game built on two pillars, and both are exceptional. The hand-drawn 1930s animation style remains unlike anything else in gaming, and the boss fights deliver the kind of challenge that makes victory feel earned rather than given. Local co-op adds a layer of chaos that changes every encounter. The run-and-gun platforming levels don't reach the same heights as the boss battles, and the difficulty will push some players past their breaking point. But for anyone who wants a game that demands everything you've got and rewards you with some of the most creative, gorgeous encounters ever designed, Cuphead delivers in a way very few games can.

Dead Cells

4.5

2018 · Action Roguelite · PC / Steam

Dead Cells is one of those rare games that makes dying feel like progress. The combat is fast, responsive, and endlessly satisfying, and the roguelite structure gives every run a distinct identity even after dozens of hours. Higher difficulty tiers can feel punishing in ways that test patience more than skill, and the weapon pool occasionally works against you, but the core loop of fighting, dying, and coming back stronger is as good as this genre gets. Motion Twin built something that kept growing for years after launch and never lost what made it special. If you have any affection for action platformers, this one belongs on your list.

Disco Elysium

4.5

2019 · RPG · PC / Steam

Disco Elysium is one of the most original RPGs ever made, a game that strips out combat entirely and replaces it with a dialogue and thought system so deep that you won't miss swinging a sword. The writing is sharp, philosophical, frequently hilarious, and unlike anything else in the genre. Your own personality traits argue with each other inside your head, and the result is a character-building system that's both mechanically inventive and narratively brilliant. It's not for everyone, and the reading-heavy design will bounce players who want action. But for those who connect with it, there's nothing else like it in gaming.

Florence

4.5

2018 · Interactive Story

Florence does more with thirty minutes than most games accomplish in thirty hours. Its tiny interactive vignettes capture the full arc of a first love with warmth, honesty, and a soundtrack that lingers long after the screen goes dark. It won't satisfy anyone looking for challenge or length, and the price-per-minute math is rough. But judging Florence by those standards misses the point entirely. This is a small, beautiful thing that earns every award it collected.

Inscryption

4.5

2021 · Card Game / Horror · PC / Steam

Inscryption is one of the most original games released in the last decade, a card game that refuses to stay a card game and keeps pulling the rug out from under you in ways that are impossible to predict. Its first act is as good as deckbuilders get, its meta-narrative adds layers that reward players who lean into the mystery, and the whole package won a shelf full of awards for very good reasons. The later acts don't hit as hard as the opening, and that inconsistency keeps it from perfection. But a game this ambitious and this willing to surprise deserves to be experienced with as little foreknowledge as possible.

Into the Breach

4.5

2018 · Turn-Based Strategy · PC / Steam

Into the Breach takes a small number of pieces, a tiny grid, and a simple set of rules, then generates an almost infinite number of fascinating problems to solve. Every turn matters, every mistake is yours, and the satisfaction of finding the perfect sequence of moves to neutralize what looked like an impossible situation never gets old. Players expecting a traditional tactics game may bounce off the puzzle-like structure, and some runs can start feeling similar once you've mastered the core systems. But for anyone who wants a strategy game that respects both your intelligence and your time, Subset Games built something close to perfect. The free Advanced Edition update only cemented that reputation.

Mini Metro

4.5

2016 · Puzzle / Strategy

Mini Metro is one of those rare mobile games that earns its place on your phone permanently. Its clean visual design, procedural soundtrack, and endlessly replayable city maps create a loop that's easy to pick up and surprisingly hard to put down. A few rough edges in line management and the occasional feeling that randomness dealt you an impossible hand are real but minor complaints. For a few dollars, you get a premium puzzle game with no ads, no timers, and no tricks, just a growing city that needs your help. It's the kind of game you'll still be opening years after you bought it.

Monument Valley

4.5

2014 · Puzzle

Monument Valley is one of the finest games ever made for a phone. Its impossible architecture, ambient soundtrack, and perspective-bending puzzles create something closer to interactive art than a traditional puzzle game. The experience is over in under two hours, and that brevity is a real limitation for anyone expecting a meaty challenge. But what's here is so carefully crafted, so visually arresting, and so unlike anything else on mobile that the short runtime barely dents its reputation. This is a game people remember years after finishing it, and there's a reason for that.

Ori and the Blind Forest

4.5

2015 · Platformer · PC / Steam

Ori and the Blind Forest is one of those rare games where every element works in concert. The platforming is precise and satisfying, the world is gorgeous and worth exploring, and the story hits harder than most games ten times its length. The Definitive Edition's added difficulty options and areas only strengthen the package. Escape sequences will test your patience, and the save system can amplify frustration in spots, but those are small costs for a game that has earned its place among the best platformers ever made. It's the kind of experience that sticks with you long after the credits.

Ori and the Will of the Wisps

4.5

2020 · Action Platformer · PC / Steam

Ori and the Will of the Wisps is a sequel that improves on its predecessor in nearly every meaningful way. The combat has real depth now, the movement is among the best the genre has ever produced, and the visual and musical presentation operates at a level most games can only aspire to. Some escape sequences frustrate more than they thrill, and certain abilities feel underused outside their introductory areas, but these are small complaints against a game that consistently reaches for something beautiful and lands it. Moon Studios built a platformer that resonates on an emotional level while still delivering satisfying action and exploration. That combination is rarer than it should be.

Return of the Obra Dinn

4.5

2018 · Mystery Puzzle · PC / Steam

Return of the Obra Dinn is one of the most original games of the past decade, a detective experience that trusts players to think carefully and rewards them for doing so. The deduction system is brilliantly designed, the 1-bit art style creates an atmosphere all its own, and the satisfaction of correctly identifying a crew member's fate is unmatched by almost any other puzzle game. Limited replay value is a real trade-off, and some fates require leaps of logic that can frustrate. But the 10 to 15 hours it takes to work through the full mystery are among the most intellectually rewarding you can spend with a game. Lucas Pope built something unlike anything before it, and nothing since has caught up.

Shovel Knight

4.5

2014 · Platformer · PC / Steam

Shovel Knight, in its Treasure Trove form, is one of the most complete platforming packages available. Four distinct campaigns, each with its own character and mechanics, plus a local multiplayer mode, add up to a staggering amount of content for a game inspired by 8-bit classics. The level design is sharp, the music is fantastic, and Yacht Club Games managed to capture what made NES-era platformers great while quietly fixing what made them frustrating. Replaying similar stages across campaigns can wear thin, but the quality of each individual run is hard to argue with. This is retro done right.

Slay the Spire

4.5

2019 · Roguelike Deckbuilder · PC / Steam

Slay the Spire defined a genre and then set a bar that years of imitators have struggled to reach. The deckbuilding is endlessly deep, the strategic decisions are meaningful from the first card pick to the final boss, and four distinct characters ensure the game stays fresh across hundreds of hours. Visuals won't impress anyone, and the learning curve can feel steep before the depth reveals itself. But this is one of those games where knowledge compounds over time, where every run teaches something, and where the gap between a beginner and a veteran is measured in understanding rather than unlocks. If you have any interest in strategy or card games, this is essential.

Stardew Valley

4.5

2019 · Simulation / Farming RPG

Stardew Valley on mobile is one of the best deals in gaming. For a few dollars you get hundreds of hours of farming, fishing, mining, and small-town life with zero ads and zero microtransactions. Touch controls work well for the relaxed pace of daily farm life, even if combat and fishing feel clunkier than they should. A tablet makes the experience noticeably better, but even on a phone this is a remarkably complete, endlessly absorbing game that most players struggle to put down. If you want a portable version of one of the best indie games ever made, this delivers.

The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth

4.5

2014 · Action Roguelite · PC / Steam

The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth is the game that defined modern roguelites for a generation of players, and it's only gotten bigger since 2014. The item pool is staggering, the synergy system creates runs that feel wildly different from each other, and the unlock progression keeps revealing new layers long after you think you've seen everything. Some of that bloat has made the game harder to parse for newcomers, and certain design decisions in the later expansions push difficulty in directions not everyone appreciates. But the core loop of exploring, collecting, and discovering how items interact remains one of the most compelling in all of gaming.

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.

The Talos Principle

4.5

2014 · Puzzle · PC / Steam

Croteam built one of the finest puzzle games ever made, and one of the few that earns the right to call itself philosophical without a hint of pretension. Puzzles consistently satisfy, and they're wrapped in a narrative that asks real questions about consciousness, obedience, and what it means to be human. Pacing drags in the middle stretch, and the puzzles don't always connect to the story as tightly as they could. But the overall package is something rare: a game that challenges your brain and then gives you something worth thinking about after you close it.

Undertale

4.5

2015 · Indie RPG · PC / Steam

Undertale is a game built on subversion. It looks like a throwback to 16-bit RPGs, but underneath that surface sits one of the most inventive takes on the genre ever made. The combat system rewards patience and curiosity over grinding, the characters stick with you long after the credits roll, and the soundtrack alone justifies the price of admission. It's short, it's deliberately lo-fi, and its gameplay outside of the narrative hook won't satisfy anyone looking for deep mechanical systems. But what it sets out to do, it does better than almost anything else in the medium.

Vampire Survivors

4.5

2022 · Action Roguelike · PC / Steam

Vampire Survivors costs a few dollars and has consumed more hours from more people than games that cost ten times as much. The loop of surviving, leveling, and unlocking is tuned to near-perfection, the constant stream of updates and DLC has kept the game growing well beyond its initial scope, and it single-handedly launched an entire subgenre of imitators. Repetition sets in eventually, and players who want direct control over their combat will chafe at the auto-attack system. But for pure, dopamine-driven fun at an absurd value, nothing else comes close.

Vampire Survivors

4.5

2022 · Action / Roguelike

Vampire Survivors on mobile is one of the best free games available on any platform. The addictive loop of surviving, leveling, and unlocking hits just as hard on a phone as it does anywhere else, and the ethical monetization model puts most of the mobile industry to shame. Touch controls hold it back from perfection, and a controller is strongly recommended for the best experience. If you have even a passing interest in action games and a phone in your pocket, there is no reason not to download this immediately.

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.

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

4.5

2004 · Michel Gondry · 108 min · Romance / Sci-Fi

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind built something rare out of a wild premise: a love story that earns its emotions without cheapening them. Charlie Kaufman's screenplay and Michel Gondry's handmade visual approach created a film that feels nothing like the standard Hollywood romance, yet hits harder than most of them. Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet found something real together on screen, playing flawed people making flawed choices with total commitment. The non-linear structure asks for patience, and it rewards that patience generously. Over two decades later, this one still lands.

Good Will Hunting

4.5

1997 · Gus Van Sant · 126 min · Drama

A small film that became a phenomenon, built almost entirely on the strength of its performances and a screenplay that knows exactly when to be funny, when to be raw, and when to shut up and let two actors sit across from each other in a room. Robin Williams turned in career-best dramatic work, Matt Damon announced himself as a serious talent, and the script they all believed in earned every bit of its commercial and critical success. It follows a familiar path and wraps things up a little too cleanly, but the emotional core hits so hard that most people don't care. Nearly three decades later, the therapy scenes alone are enough to justify its reputation.

Moonlight

4.5

2016 · Barry Jenkins · 111 min · Drama

Moonlight tells a story about identity and longing with such visual and emotional precision that it feels less like watching a film and more like remembering someone else's life. The three actors who carry the lead role create something remarkable together, and Mahershala Ali delivers a performance that echoes through the entire film despite limited screen time. Some viewers will wish the story pushed harder in its final chapter, and the quiet, observational style won't click for everyone. But for those willing to meet it on its own terms, this is filmmaking at its most achingly human.

Moon

4.3

2009 · Duncan Jones · 97 min · Sci-Fi / Drama

Moon is the kind of small-scale science fiction that proves you don't need a massive budget to ask massive questions. Duncan Jones built his directorial debut around a single actor, a single location, and a premise that unfolds with devastating precision. Sam Rockwell delivers a career-best performance that somehow makes you feel the weight of three years of lunar isolation in under 100 minutes. The low budget shows in spots, the pacing demands patience, and the central mystery reveals itself earlier than some viewers would prefer. None of that diminishes what Jones accomplished here. This is smart, humane sci-fi that trusts its audience completely and rewards that trust.

Slay the Spire 2

4.3

2026 · Roguelike Deckbuilder · PC / Steam

Slay the Spire 2 takes the genre its predecessor defined and rebuilds it from the ground up. New classes, co-op multiplayer for up to four players, and mechanics like Doom, Sly, and Enchantments add meaningful depth without losing the tight strategic loop that made the original so compelling. Early access growing pains are real, with balance controversies and a review-bombed Steam page creating noise around a game that deserves better. Underneath that noise sits the most ambitious roguelike deckbuilder on the market, and one that already justifies its existence even before the full release arrives.

Mindustry

4.3

2019 · Factory Builder / Tower Defense

Mindustry is one of the most impressive mobile games available, blending factory building and tower defense into a deep, complex experience that rivals full PC titles. The open-source model means no ads, no in-app purchases, and an active modding community that keeps expanding the game long after the developer steps back. Cross-platform multiplayer and cloud saves make it a fully portable extension of the PC experience. The learning curve is harsh and the touch controls take patience, but players who push through find a game with hundreds of hours of depth. If factory optimization and tower defense both appeal to you, this is the rare mobile game that delivers on both fronts without compromise.

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.

Dead Cells

4.3

2019 · Action Roguelike

Dead Cells on mobile is one of the best premium ports available on phones and tablets, translating a demanding action roguelite with impressive care. Auto-hit mode and customizable controls make the touchscreen experience far better than it has any right to be, though a controller still unlocks the game's full potential. The sheer volume of weapons, paths, and DLC content means hundreds of hours of runs that rarely feel the same twice. If you can handle the punishment and have a phone made in the last few years, this belongs in your library.

FTL: Faster Than Light

4.3

2012 · Roguelike Strategy · PC / Steam

FTL: Faster Than Light gives you command of a small ship, a desperate mission, and a galaxy that's trying to kill you in a different way every time you play. The pause-and-play combat system creates moments of brilliant tactical thinking, and the randomized encounters produce stories you'll remember long after the run ends. RNG can be brutal in ways that feel unfair, and the final boss encounter is a difficulty spike that the rest of the game doesn't fully prepare you for. But the addictive loop of starting one more run, making slightly better decisions, and pushing a little further is what made FTL a landmark indie game. The free Advanced Edition expansion made a great game even better, and a dedicated modding community has kept it alive for over a decade.

Lethal Company

4.3

2023 · Co-op Horror · PC / Steam

Lethal Company is one of those games that sounds unremarkable on paper and then devours your entire friend group's free time for months. A solo developer built a co-op horror experience that generates better stories than most AAA studios write on purpose. The early access status means rough edges still exist, and playing alone isn't really an option, but those limitations fade fast when you're sprinting back to the ship at 11:58 PM while something with too many legs chases your crew through the rain. If you've got friends who play PC games, this belongs on the short list of things to try together.

Noita

4.3

2020 · Action Roguelite · PC / Steam

Noita is a game built on a single wild idea, that every pixel on screen should be physically simulated, and it follows that idea to its logical extreme. The wand-crafting system offers some of the deepest build customization in the roguelite genre, and the interactions between spells, materials, and environments create moments no other game can replicate. It asks for patience and a willingness to fail over and over before the pieces click into place, and lots of players never make it past that wall. Those who do find one of the most rewarding and creative sandboxes in modern gaming.

Risk of Rain 2

4.3

2020 · Action Roguelite · PC / Steam

Risk of Rain 2 pulled off one of the most impressive transitions in recent memory, jumping from 2D to 3D without losing what made the original special. The item stacking system creates power fantasies that few games in the genre can match, and cooperative multiplayer elevates the whole experience. DLC releases after Hopoo's departure have been a mixed bag, with some additions landing well and others causing real problems. The core game that Hopoo built remains excellent, and that foundation is strong enough to keep players coming back years after launch.

SOMA

4.3

2015 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

SOMA is Frictional Games at the height of their storytelling powers. The underwater setting, the philosophical questions about identity and consciousness, and the relationship between its two lead characters create a narrative that sticks with you long after the credits roll. The monster encounters are the weakest link, and the Safe Mode update essentially acknowledged that by letting players bypass them, but the story they're wrapped around is one of the best the genre has produced. Horror games that make you think this hard about what it means to be human don't come along often. This one is worth the dive.

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.

Cytus II

4.2

2018 · Rhythm

Cytus II is the rare mobile rhythm game that would be remarkable for its music alone but goes further by wrapping hundreds of songs in a cyberpunk narrative that rewards real investment. The touch controls are precise, the difficulty scaling is generous to newcomers while punishing for experts, and the sheer volume of musical genres represented means the soundtrack never grows stale. DLC pricing adds up quickly for completionists, and the story requires paid characters to fully experience. But the base game offers enough content to justify its entry price many times over, and what Rayark built here stands as one of the best rhythm games on any platform.

Crashlands

4.2

2016 · Action RPG / Crafting

Crashlands is one of the best crafting-survival games available on mobile, built from the ground up to respect your time and your touchscreen. The inventory management alone puts most desktop survival games to shame, and the humor keeps the grind from ever feeling like work. Combat is simple but satisfying, boss fights are memorable, and the cross-platform cloud saves mean your progress follows you everywhere. It runs out of surprises in the late game and the story loses momentum after the first biome, but by then you've already gotten dozens of hours of genuine fun out of it.

Tinykin

4.2

2022 · 3D Platformer · PC / Steam

Tinykin is a joyful collectathon that borrows the best parts of Pikmin and 3D platformers, then wraps them in a world that's a constant delight to explore. Every room in the oversized house is packed with creative details, shortcuts to unlock, and puzzles that use the Tinykin types in clever ways. It's on the easy side, and it ends before its ideas run out, which is both a compliment and a mild disappointment. For anyone who misses the feeling of discovering secrets in a well-crafted game world, this is a treat.

Pocket City

4.2

2018 · Simulation / City Builder

Pocket City is the mobile city builder that SimCity fans have been waiting for: a premium, offline-capable game with no ads, no timers, and no in-app purchases cluttering the experience. The building mechanics are accessible and satisfying, the progression system keeps early hours engaging, and the sandbox mode offers open-ended creativity for those who want it. It lacks the deep simulation layers of its PC inspirations, but as a mobile-first city builder, it nails the fundamentals and respects your time while doing it.

Lost in Translation

4.2

2003 · Sofia Coppola · 102 min · Drama

Lost in Translation captures a very specific kind of loneliness, the kind that hits hardest when you're surrounded by people and noise in a place that doesn't feel like yours. Sofia Coppola built the film around two performances that do most of the heavy lifting through silence and small gestures rather than big dramatic speeches, and Bill Murray in particular gives a career-best turn that balances comedy and melancholy without ever choosing one over the other. The pacing will bore some people. The portrait of Tokyo has drawn fair criticism for staying at the surface level of cultural disorientation rather than engaging more deeply. But when the film works, it captures something about human connection that very few movies have managed to put on screen.

Amnesia: The Dark Descent

4.2

2010 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Amnesia: The Dark Descent changed what horror games could be. By stripping away weapons and forcing players to confront threats with nothing but their wits and a dwindling supply of tinderboxes, Frictional Games created an experience that made vulnerability the whole point. The sanity system, the darkness mechanic, and the sound design work together to produce tension that holds up more than fifteen years later. It spawned an entire subgenre of imitators, and most of them still haven't matched it. If you want to understand where modern horror gaming found its voice, start here.

Darkest Dungeon

4.2

2016 · Turn-Based RPG · PC / Steam

Darkest Dungeon is a game that wants you to feel the cost of every decision, and its stress system, atmospheric art, and punishing combat deliver on that promise completely. Red Hook Studios built something that feels fundamentally different from other dungeon crawlers, where managing your heroes' mental state matters as much as their hit points. The grind through the mid-game and the occasional run-ending RNG streak are real weaknesses that test player patience. But the atmosphere is unmatched, the narrator alone is worth experiencing, and the moments where a desperate gamble pays off create the kind of stories that keep players talking about this game years after release.

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.

Enter the Gungeon

4.2

2016 · Bullet Hell Roguelite · PC / Steam

Enter the Gungeon is one of the tightest bullet hell roguelites ever made, with dodge-rolling, table-flipping, and gun-blasting that feels incredible once the controls click. The weapon variety is massive and consistently creative, and the gun-themed world commits to its concept with infectious enthusiasm. Early runs can feel punishing before you've unlocked enough of the arsenal to see the game at its best, and the difficulty never really lets up even after you've improved. For players who want a roguelite built around moment-to-moment action skill rather than build optimization, this is one of the best options available.

The Battle of Polytopia

4.2

2016 · 4X Strategy

The Battle of Polytopia carved out a space that nobody else has seriously contested: a full 4X strategy game that fits comfortably into a phone-sized session. Ten years after launch, it still works because the formula is so well-tuned. Explore, expand, exploit, exterminate, all in about fifteen minutes. The tech tree won't challenge anyone who's spent serious time with deeper strategy games, and tribe balance remains a work in progress. But the monetization is honest, the updates keep coming, and the core loop has that addictive pull that makes you start one more game when you should be putting your phone down. For a free download, it delivers more than most paid strategy games even attempt.

Death's Door

4.1

2021 · Action Adventure · PC / Steam

Death's Door is a tightly crafted action adventure that punches well above its two-person studio origins. The world design rewards curiosity with hidden paths and secrets tucked into every corner, the boss encounters each bring something distinct to the table, and the whole package is wrapped in an art style that makes its dark subject matter feel surprisingly warm. Combat simplicity and limited weapon variety keep it from reaching the heights of the genre's best, but the 10-12 hour runtime means it never overstays its welcome. Acid Nerve built something charming, polished, and worth every minute.

Don't Starve: Pocket Edition

4.1

2015 · Survival / Roguelike

Don't Starve: Pocket Edition brings Klei's unforgiving wilderness survival game to mobile with its atmosphere and depth fully intact. The hand-drawn art style looks gorgeous on small screens, the crafting and exploration systems provide dozens of hours of tense discovery, and the DLC expansions add enormous replay value. Touch controls can't match the precision of mouse and keyboard, and the game offers almost no guidance, but players willing to learn through failure will find one of the most rewarding survival experiences available on mobile.

Planet Crafter

4.1

2024 · Survival / Sandbox · PC / Steam

Planet Crafter takes the survival crafting formula and builds it around one of the most satisfying progression loops in the genre: watching a barren, lifeless planet slowly transform into a living world because of your actions. The terraforming is the star, and the visible environmental changes as you raise oxygen, heat, and pressure create a feedback loop that makes hours disappear. Late-game content thins out and the story is minimal, but the core experience of building something from nothing on an alien world is deeply compelling.

Axiom Verge

4.0

2015 · Action Adventure · PC / Steam

Axiom Verge is a love letter to classic exploration-based sci-fi games that manages to carve out its own identity through inventive weapons and a glitch mechanic that turns game corruption into a tool. Built entirely by one person, it delivers a sprawling alien world packed with secrets, creative weapons, and atmospheric pixel art. Navigation can be frustrating when you lose your bearings, and some of the weapon variety is more interesting in concept than in practice, but the core exploration loop is satisfying and the Address Disruptor alone is worth the price of admission.

Blasphemous

4.0

2019 · Action Platformer · PC / Steam

Blasphemous is a striking metroidvania built on a foundation of religious horror, gorgeous pixel art, and punishing combat. The atmosphere and visual design are extraordinary, creating a world unlike anything else in the genre. Backtracking without enough fast travel points and some cryptic quest logic hold it back from greatness, but the sheer artistry on display carries it through those frustrations. Anyone drawn to dark, challenging platformers with a strong sense of identity should put this near the top of their list.

Coherence

4.0

2013 · James Ward Byrkit · 89 min · Sci-Fi / Thriller / Mystery

Coherence accomplishes more with a dinner party and a passing comet than most science fiction films manage with ten times the budget. James Ward Byrkit's directorial debut was shot over five nights in his own house with largely improvised dialogue, and the result is a puzzle-box thriller that rewards careful attention and repeat viewings. The concept is brilliant, the tension escalates with remarkable precision, and the final stretch delivers a gut punch that reframes everything that came before. Handheld camera work and a few uneven performances remind you of the production's limitations, but the ideas at the center are so compelling that those rough edges become part of the film's scrappy charm.

Nine Sols

4.0

2024 · Action Platformer · PC / Steam

Nine Sols is a beautifully hand-drawn action platformer that builds its entire combat system around parrying and talisman detonation, creating fights that feel like violent puzzles. The boss encounters are exceptional, the art direction is stunning, and the Chinese mythology-inspired setting gives it a cultural identity that stands apart from the crowd. Brutal difficulty and some pacing issues in the story keep it from universal appeal, but players who click with its deflection-focused combat will find one of the most satisfying action games in recent years.

Bad North

4.0

2018 · Real-Time Tactics

Bad North is a masterclass in minimalist game design that proves you don't need complex systems to create genuine tactical tension. The procedurally generated islands, the clean visual style, and the permanent consequences of each battle combine into a roguelite loop that respects your time while punishing your mistakes. The simplicity that makes it so approachable is also its ceiling, and players craving deep strategic systems will eventually exhaust what the game offers. For everyone else, this is one of the most elegant strategy games available on mobile, and the premium pricing with zero in-app purchases makes it an easy recommendation.

Devotion

4.0

2019 · Psychological Horror · PC

Devotion is a deeply personal horror game that uses a 1980s Taiwanese apartment as the stage for a family tragedy steeped in superstition and regret. Red Candle Games crafted one of the most emotionally resonant horror experiences in recent memory, with environmental storytelling so detailed that every object in the apartment tells part of the story. The game is short at roughly three hours, the puzzles are simple, and the lack of real danger reduces tension in the back half. But the narrative payoff is devastating, the cultural specificity enriches every moment, and few horror games have ever made their setting feel this lived-in. It's less about being scared and more about being heartbroken, and that's what makes it unforgettable.

Outlast

4.0

2013 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Outlast is one of the defining horror games of the 2010s, built on a simple but devastatingly effective premise: you cannot fight back. The camcorder night vision mechanic creates a unique visual identity and constant resource tension, and the asylum setting delivers dread in waves. The formula wears thin in the final stretch as repetition sets in, but the first two-thirds of Outlast represent some of the most intensely frightening gameplay the genre has produced.

Limbo

4.0

2013 · Puzzle Platformer

Limbo on mobile is one of the most atmospheric games available on a phone, and the touch controls translate the experience better than anyone expected. The monochrome art style and ambient sound design create a tension that doesn't let up from start to finish. It's short, finishing in three to four hours, and the story leaves more questions than answers. But every one of those hours is dense with memorable moments, clever puzzles, and a creeping sense of dread that lingers after you put it down. As a premium game with no ads or in-app purchases, it's a small investment for an experience that stays with you.

Dicey Dungeons

4.0

2022 · Roguelike Deckbuilder

Dicey Dungeons is a brilliantly designed roguelike that turns dice rolls into tactical decisions with real weight. Six distinct characters keep the game fresh far longer than its cheerful presentation suggests, and the mobile port runs beautifully with touch controls that feel native to the platform. The lack of iCloud syncing is an unnecessary annoyance, and RNG-heavy runs can occasionally feel punishing regardless of your choices. But the core design is so clever and the value proposition so strong that those complaints barely register against the hours of inventive gameplay on offer.

Game Dev Tycoon

4.0

2017 · Business Simulation

Game Dev Tycoon translates beautifully to mobile, offering a business simulation that's easy to pick up in short sessions and hard to put down once you start chasing higher review scores. The meta-humor of making games about games never fully wears off, and the progression from garage to office to campus creates a satisfying arc. Repetition sets in after multiple playthroughs when the systems reveal their limits, and the lack of mod support on mobile removes one of the PC version's biggest draws. But as a premium, ad-free simulation game on your phone, it's one of the best options available.

Rain World

4.0

2017 · Survival Platformer · PC / Steam

Rain World is one of the most unique and uncompromising games on PC. Its procedurally driven ecosystem creates a living world where you're not the protagonist but the prey, and surviving in it demands patience, observation, and a willingness to accept that the game won't hold your hand. The difficulty and opaque design will turn many players away, and the early hours can be genuinely miserable before the game's beauty reveals itself. But for those who push through, Rain World offers an experience that nothing else replicates. It's a game that earns its devoted following the hard way.

20 Minutes Till Dawn

4.0

2023 · Action Roguelike · PC / Steam

20 Minutes Till Dawn strips the survivor-like genre to its essentials and executes them with precision. The tight time limit creates urgency that longer games in the genre lack, and the upgrade synergies can produce absurdly powerful builds that feel earned rather than given. It's slim on content compared to its biggest competitors, and runs can start to blur together after a while. But for its price point, this is one of the tightest, most satisfying loops in the bullet heaven space.

Across the Obelisk

4.0

2022 · Roguelike Deckbuilder · PC / Steam

Across the Obelisk is a co-op deckbuilder that thrives on party synergy and build variety. Managing a four-hero team with intertwined card combos gives it a tactical richness that most games in the genre can't match. It's best with friends, and solo players may find the AI companions limiting, but the sheer volume of unlockable heroes, cards, and paths keeps runs feeling fresh for dozens of hours. If you've been looking for a deckbuilder you can share with someone, this is the one.

Luck be a Landlord

4.0

2022 · Roguelike · PC / Steam

Luck be a Landlord turns a slot machine into a roguelike puzzle, and the result is dangerously addictive. Building synergies between symbols on the reels creates a strategic depth that the simple premise doesn't advertise. Runs are quick, the learning curve is gentle, and the moment a build clicks into place is consistently satisfying. It runs out of surprises eventually, and the randomness can occasionally feel punishing. But as a pick-up-and-play roguelike with a clever core concept, it punches well above its weight.

Unpacking

4.0

2021 · Puzzle / Zen · PC / Steam

Unpacking tells a complete life story through the simple act of putting things where they belong, and it does so with a subtlety that most narrative games never achieve. The pixel art is gorgeous, the sound design is impeccable, and each new move reveals more about a character you'll never hear speak. It's short, it's niche, and some players will wonder where the 'game' is. But for those who click with it, Unpacking is a quietly unforgettable experience.

Dredge

4.0

2023 · Adventure · PC / Steam

Dredge takes two things that shouldn't work together, fishing simulation and cosmic horror, and makes them feel inseparable. The atmosphere is exceptional, the inventory puzzle of fitting catches into your hull is oddly satisfying, and the sense of dread that builds as night falls gives routine fishing trips real tension. It runs short and the late game doesn't quite match the mystery of the opening hours, but what's here is a tightly crafted experience that does something no other game is doing.

Device 6

4.0

2013 · Puzzle / Adventure

Device 6 is one of the most original games ever released on iOS, a game that treats the phone itself as a puzzle mechanism and builds an entire spy thriller around the act of scrolling through text. Simogo's writing is sharp, the puzzles are clever without being unfair, and the Cold War atmosphere seeps through every chapter. It's short, lasting around two to three hours, and replay value is limited once you know the solutions. But those hours contain more invention per minute than most games manage in ten times the length. If you've ever wished mobile games would do something truly different with the device in your hand, this is the answer.

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.

Reigns

4.0

2016 · Strategy / Simulation

Reigns takes one of the simplest mechanics in mobile gaming, a binary swipe, and builds a surprisingly deep kingdom management game around it. The writing is sharp, the deaths are darkly funny, and the hidden objectives give you reasons to keep playing long after the novelty of the swipe mechanic would otherwise fade. Randomness can feel punishing when you're chasing specific goals, and the lack of transparency about what your choices actually do will frustrate methodical players. It's a game best enjoyed in short bursts, treated as a dark comedy about the impossibility of keeping everyone happy rather than a puzzle to be solved.

Badland

4.0

2013 · Action Adventure

Badland is a game that proves mobile devices can deliver atmosphere and artistry without compromise. Its silhouetted world is gorgeous, its physics engine is endlessly surprising, and the first few hours offer some of the most creative level design in mobile gaming history. The experience does wear thin if you push through all 100 stages in quick succession, and the ad interruptions in the free version test your patience. But taken in shorter sessions, the way mobile games are meant to be played, Badland holds up remarkably well over a decade after release. It won Apple's iPad Game of the Year for good reason, and new players discovering it today will understand why within minutes.

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.

Crossy Road

4.0

2014 · Arcade

Crossy Road took the oldest idea in arcade gaming, gave it a fresh coat of voxel paint, and turned it into one of the most downloaded mobile games ever made. The controls are instant, the art style is impossible not to like, and the session length is perfect for killing two minutes or two hours. Repetition is baked into the formula, and the ad situation has gotten worse over the years. But the core loop still works exactly the way it did in 2014, and that's because Hipster Whale understood something fundamental about mobile games: they need to feel good before they need to do anything else.

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.

Phasmophobia

4.0

2020 · Co-op Horror · PC / Steam

Phasmophobia turned a simple premise into one of the most effective co-op horror experiences on PC. The ghost hunting loop is satisfying, the voice recognition adds an interaction layer that nothing else offers, and playing with friends creates the kind of shared stories that keep groups coming back for years. It's still in early access, with rough edges that show, and solo play can't replicate what makes the game special. But for groups looking for something properly scary that also generates constant laughter, Phasmophobia occupies a space in co-op gaming that nobody else has filled.

Mean Streets

3.9

1973 · Martin Scorsese · 112 min · Crime / Drama

Mean Streets is the film where Martin Scorsese found his voice and Robert De Niro announced his arrival, a raw, energetic portrait of small-time hoods in Little Italy that trades plot for atmosphere and character in ways that felt revolutionary in 1973. Harvey Keitel's Charlie is a man paralyzed between obligation and conscience, while De Niro's Johnny Boy is a live wire who makes every scene he enters unpredictable. The low budget shows, the narrative wanders, and the film lacks the polish of what Scorsese would achieve later. But the vitality on screen is undeniable, and its influence on independent American cinema and the crime genre has only grown over fifty years.

Viewfinder

3.8

2023 · Puzzle · PC / Steam

Viewfinder is a puzzle game built on one of the most striking mechanics in recent memory. Placing photographs into the world to reshape reality is consistently surprising, and the visual design sells every moment of it. The puzzles themselves don't always match the ambition of the central concept, trending toward easy solutions that leave the mechanic underutilized. It's a short, beautiful experience that's more impressive than it is challenging, and for many players, that's enough.

Peglin

3.8

2023 · Roguelike / Puzzle · PC / Steam

Peglin mashes pachinko physics with roguelike deck building and turns the result into something far more compelling than it sounds. Launching orbs into a field of pegs and watching damage numbers cascade as they bounce creates a unique satisfaction that no other roguelike offers. The RNG can feel oppressive when bad bounces tank a run, and the strategic depth doesn't quite match the genre's best. But the core concept is so inventive and the moment-to-moment gameplay so fun that Peglin earns its place alongside the roguelike heavyweights through sheer creativity.

Torchlight

3.7

2009 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Torchlight proved that a small team with deep genre knowledge could build an action RPG that captures the addictive loot loop without the bloat that often comes with bigger budgets. Three distinct classes, a pet companion system that keeps inventory management painless, and mod support that extends the dungeon crawling indefinitely make it a package that punches well above its price point. The lack of multiplayer is a genuine gap for a genre built on cooperative play, and the single-dungeon structure starts to feel samey in longer sessions. But as a focused, polished entry point into the action RPG genre, Torchlight still delivers exactly what it promises.

Visage

3.5

2020 · Psychological Horror · PC / Steam

Visage is one of the most terrifying games released in recent years, with an atmosphere and sound design that can make simply standing in a hallway feel unbearable. Its commitment to psychological horror is total, and when it works, nothing else in the genre comes close. But the obscure puzzle design, frustrating inventory system, and wildly uneven chapter quality mean that patience is the price of admission. Players who can tolerate the rough edges will find something truly special underneath.

Salt and Sanctuary

3.5

2016 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Salt and Sanctuary translates the Souls formula into 2D with more success than most would have expected from a two-person team. The combat is weighty and satisfying, the boss roster is large and varied, and the interconnected world rewards exploration. Balance issues become noticeable as you progress, with certain builds trivializing content while others hit frustrating walls, and the lack of a map can make navigation a chore. It's a strong choice for fans of both Souls-style combat and metroidvania exploration, delivering a challenging experience that occasionally stumbles on its own ambition.

Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night

3.5

2019 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night delivers on its promise as a spiritual successor to the Castlevania games that inspired it, with Koji Igarashi crafting a metroidvania that hits many of the same notes that made those classics memorable. The shard system adds real depth to combat, and the castle is packed with secrets worth finding. Controls that lack precision, some generic level design, and a crafting system that overcomplicates things keep it from reaching the heights of its inspiration. It's a solid metroidvania that will satisfy fans of the style, even if it never quite steps out from under the shadow of what came before.

Mortal Shell

3.5

2020 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Mortal Shell is a focused, atmospheric take on the souls-like formula built by a team of roughly 15 people, and the ambition shows in both its best ideas and its limitations. The Harden mechanic is a smart and original addition to the genre's defensive toolkit, and the visual design punches far above what you'd expect from a studio this small. Limited weapon variety, a short runtime, and enemies that don't always match the quality of the game's systems keep it from standing shoulder to shoulder with the genre's heavyweights. It works best as a proof of concept, one that demonstrates real talent and leaves you wanting to see what Cold Symmetry does next.

Dungeon of the Endless

3.5

2020 · Roguelike Tower Defense

Dungeon of the Endless is a genre-blending original that combines roguelike exploration, tower defense, and squad management into something no other game has successfully replicated. The core design is inventive and tense, with every opened door creating a risk-reward calculation that keeps runs feeling unpredictable even after dozens of attempts. The mobile port undermines that experience with a cramped interface, small text, and touch controls that aren't precise enough for a game where one misplaced tap can end a run. If you have a tablet, the experience improves considerably. On a phone, the game fights against its own platform. It's a brilliant design trapped in a frustrating wrapper, and whether the brilliance outweighs the frustration depends on your tolerance for UI friction and your screen size.

Cry of Fear

3.5

2012 · Survival Horror · PC / Steam

Cry of Fear is one of the most ambitious horror projects ever built on the Half-Life engine, delivering a psychological horror campaign that takes real mental health themes seriously and wraps them in deeply terrifying enemy design and atmosphere. The sound design alone would put most AAA horror games to shame, and the amount of content packed into a free game is remarkable. But the engine shows its age in combat that feels clunky rather than tense, puzzles that frustrate more than they challenge, and technical issues that interrupt the experience at its most intense moments. It's a flawed, deeply personal creation that punches well above its weight class when it's working and tests your patience when it isn't.

Layers of Fear

3.5

2016 · Psychological Horror · PC / Steam

Layers of Fear turns a Victorian mansion into a shifting, unreliable space that mirrors its protagonist's fractured mind, and the result is one of the more memorable psychological horror experiences on PC. The constantly changing environment keeps you off balance, and the story of an artist consumed by obsession hits harder than most horror game narratives. It's short, light on traditional gameplay, and divisive on whether its scares land, but for players who value atmosphere and storytelling over mechanics, this is a focused and effective piece of horror.

Roguebook

3.5

2021 · Roguelike Deckbuilder · PC / Steam

Roguebook has good ideas and a pedigree that promises more than the final product delivers. The two-hero system and hex map exploration add wrinkles to the deckbuilder formula that are worth experiencing, and the combat has enough depth to sustain a few dozen hours of runs. But it struggles to escape the shadow of the games that inspired it, and the progression system that's supposed to keep you coming back can feel like it's gating the fun. It's a solid second-tier deckbuilder that's worth trying on sale if you've exhausted the genre's best.

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.