tldr videogame curation
melbourne, australia

Death Stranding 2: On the Beach is coming to PC on March 19 via Steam and Epic, with new features and modes arriving on PS5 the same day as a free update. Obviously loved DS2, so glad PC players get to experience it.

Remedy shared a much deeper look at CONTROL Resonant, showing off its shapeshifting weapons, gravity anomalies and a warped Manhattan. Looks to a layman like a real technical achievement. Love CONTROL, so cannot wait for this one.

Beast of Reincarnation is a new action RPG from Game Freak, set in a far-future sci-fi Japan. You play as Emma and her companion Koo, switching between real-time sword combat and a turn-based command system for the dog. It’s a strange and promising setup. Launches August 4 on PS5.

IO Interactive showed more of 007 First Light, an original Bond origin story set before his recruitment into the 00 programme. The new trailer centred on a mission in Iceland and introduced John Greenway, a former 00 agent turned training instructor, alongside a rogue 009 as the central threat. Keen.

Winnie’s Hole is a grotesque, inventive roguelite where you infect dear old Winnie from the inside out - literally. Part deckbuilder, part tetromino puzzler, it’s mechanically sharp and thematically cursed. It may have been a joke premise, but the systems have real teeth. Fantastic.

An ambitious gacha mixing real-time combat, Satisfactory-like base-building, and a grab-bag of other systems and minigames. The factory sim and automation are what you’d expect (if simplified), the presentation genuinely impressive, but tutorial bloat and predatory pulls may test your patience… and your wallet.

Cairn is a brutal, meditative climb up a mountain that is utterly indifferent to your suffering. Every hold is deliberate, every resource hard-won. Quiet, lonely, and sometimes euphoric - a true strand-type game: walk slow, suffer deeply, and search for meaning in the silence.

Shape of Dreams is a roguelite with MOBA-style combat, sharp progression, and dense buildcrafting. Characters shift drastically depending on your upgrades, and runs snowballs fast. It’s chaotic, stylish, and full of smart mechanical ideas.

Q-UP pretends to be a sweaty 4v4 ranked esport, but it’s really a pseudo-multiplayer incremental dressed in a sponsored competitive jersey. You build elaborate skill engines, then watch the coin flip and the satire unfold. The joke works, and so does the game. Brilliant.

A stylish, fast-paced incremental with satisfying feedback and great polish. Its upgrade tree is mostly linear and not all modes feel essential, but the main loop delivers short bursts of dopamine-maxing destruction. Not for deep strategists, but ideal if you want to switch off and watch numbers-go-up for a short while.