Chainswords. Bolters. Tyranids. No mercy.Saber Interactive’s Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2 doesn’t try to be subtle. It’s a roaring, blood-splattered return to a cult classic that doesn’t just live in the Warhammer 40K universe—it shoves you into the frontlines and demands you carve a path through it. Following up on the 2011 original, Space Marine 2 brings back Lieutenant Titus, now demoted, disgraced, and ready for redemption. You’re not here to sneak or solve puzzles. You’re here to kill everything that isn’t painted Ultramarine blue—and do it with style. The result? One of the most satisfying and unapologetically brutal third-person…
Author: Obsidian
SCP: Fragmented Minds is not just another indie horror title riding on the popularity of the SCP universe. It’s a surprisingly polished, narrative-driven sci-fi horror game that blends the best elements of Dead Space, Alien: Isolation, and SCP: Containment Breach, while carving out its own identity in the growing catalog of SCP-based media. Developed as a chapter-based release, the first entry sets the tone with tight visuals, immersive world-building, and a disturbing glimpse into a Martian facility gone completely to hell. While still in its early stages—with only Chapter One currently available—Fragmented Minds already establishes itself as one of the…
Look Outside isn’t your typical survival horror RPG — it’s a psychological nightmare wrapped in cosmic terror and body horror. Developed by an indie team with a knack for unsettling experiences, this game throws you into the confines of a dimly lit apartment building where reality is unraveling. Looking outside is deadly, but the temptation to uncover the truth is irresistible. You’re tasked with surviving for 15 days in a world where even a glimpse of the outside turns people into grotesque creatures. With its turn-based combat, resource management, NPC interactions, and branching narrative, Look Outside doesn’t just challenge your…
Keep Driving is a delightful mix of a road trip simulator and a roguelike deck-building game set in the early 2000s. You play as a newly licensed driver heading to a music festival, but the journey is anything but straightforward. Along the way, you’ll manage gas, energy, and car durability while encountering a variety of unpredictable events, bizarre hitchhikers, and optional quests that shape your path. With resource management, random events, and branching choices, Keep Driving feels like a perfect blend of strategy and storytelling. Each run is unique, and the choices you make — from what items to pack…
Atomfall is not your average post-apocalyptic survival game. Developed by Rebellion, the team behind the Sniper Elite series, this atmospheric action-adventure steps away from bullets and ballistics in favor of eerie storytelling, slow-burn exploration, and British weirdness. Imagine Fallout: New Vegas meets S.T.A.L.K.E.R., but set in a retro-futuristic 1960s version of the English countryside. Add cults, radiation, bartering, and a heavy folk-horror vibe, and you’ve got something both familiar and refreshingly different. This is a game that dares to trust the player — and in doing so, it offers something quite special… even if it comes with a few rough…
There’s a feeling you get when a game stops trying to impress you and instead just lets you feel. That’s the best way I can describe Lost Records: Bloom & Rage. It’s less of a thrill ride and more of a slow walk back into a memory you didn’t realize you missed. Created by Don’t Nod, the team behind the original Life is Strange, Lost Records feels like a spiritual sibling—soaked in 90s aesthetics, filled with heartfelt dialogue, and brimming with character-driven storytelling. If you’ve ever loved a game for the emotions it stirred in you more than the mechanics…