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What to play this week: Little Nightmares, Star Wars and Wargroove

What to play this week: Little Nightmares, Star Wars and Wargroove

wargroove
(Image credit: Chucklefish)

One recurring theme in our "What to play this week" column at Tom's Guide is that the newest games aren't always the all-time games to play correct now. In this week's lineup, for example, the latest game in the roster came out in Oct 2020. (The oldest came out in April 2017.) There's also quite a scrap of variety on display, as we spring from side-scrollers, to strategy, to space sims.

This calendar week, our trainee news author Denise Primbet dives into Piddling Nightmares, our automotive editor Tom Pritchard straps on a VR headset for Star Wars: Squadrons and our staff writer Richard Priday puzzles his way through Wargroove. If any of these games audio appealing, you can pick them upwardly yourself. And feel free to jump into the comments to share what yous're playing.

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Little Nightmares

little nightmares

(Image credit: Bandai Namco)

This week, I've been replaying Little Nightmares for what I believe to be my fourth or 5th time. And yet, somehow, it withal gets my blood pumping just like the outset time. I kickoff came across the take chances puzzle-platformer when information technology was just released in 2017, but before I first acquired a taste for the horror genre. And what an introduction it was.

From the long-armed Janitor and the cannibalistic twin Chefs to the big bad Lady, the game has some of the near terrifying villains I've e'er come beyond in video games. So forget about the  misleading impression that some may have of Little Nightmares — it's not whatever less scary because it's more 'cartoonish' than other horror games. Fifty-fifty afterwards the long-awaited 2021 release of Fiddling Nightmares ii, the original game and its DLCs are still unmatched in terms of the harrowing nautical world that the small raincoat-clad protagonist named 6 (whom you control) has to survive.

Having experienced Little Nightmares on a PS4 Pro the starting time fourth dimension round, it was a pleasance now being able to relive the experience every bit a PC user on my trusty Razer Blade 15 laptop. Of course, the game isn't nearly as graphically intensive as say other notable representatives of the horror genre such every bit Resident Evil Village. However, the smoother movements and noticeable bump in shadow quality added a whole new layer of spookiness to an otherwise unchanged experience.

If you're looking for a short and sugariness horror adventure to try out during the weekend, there'due south zip I'd recommend more than Petty Nightmares. With a story that lasts around 3-to-four hours, you lot'll have more than than enough fourth dimension to trounce the game and still have half a day remaining to have on the DLC and perhaps even the sequel, provided you're brave enough. — Denise Primbet

Star Wars: Squadrons

star wars squadrons

(Epitome credit: EA)

While I'm still dashing through the fields of Hyrule in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, this weekend I'll be spending a chunk of time zipping around in a galaxy far far away. Nigh of the new Star Wars games haven't felt hugely inspiring, merely Squadrons was i that I got excited about as soon every bit it was announced - especially since it's compatible with the PSVR headset.

I haven't had enough fourth dimension to get started yet, simply the timing seems right as I've just finished reading the Alphabet Squadron books. And frankly what kind of Star Wars fan hasn't dreamt about strapping into the cockpit of an Ten-Fly, and shooting down some TIE Fighters?

I just wonder how long I tin can last in VR. I don't take the best experience with move sickness and headsets, and I have not been feeling so hot this week. So I'm not entirely convinced that I won't have to give up pretty early on. I'm just glad that I don't have to clear much space offset, seeing every bit how it's basically a glorified flight sim. The only challenge is making sure my dog doesn't trip over the PSVR'southward gargantuan cablevision when I'one thousand otherwise occupied. — Tom Pritchard

Wargroove

Wargroove

(Image credit: Chucklefish)

This 2019 strategy title had been resting on my digital shelf of Nintendo Switch games since I gave up in frustration a calendar month or so afterward information technology launched. Notwithstanding, memories of the fun times I had playing it started worming their way into the front of my brain over the by month, brought on by the announcement of Advance Wars i and two: Reboot Camp. And and then I have been playing the game for an hour or so each solar day since.

Just like Advance Wars and Fire Keepsake, this game is a turn-based strategy game in which you lot must produce different units and send them into battle across a square filigree filled with different terrain and properties to capture. Different those games, though, Wargroove takes your chosen commander and makes them a unit of measurement on the battlefield, with a unique power yous tin employ to turn an engagement in your favor.

I've managed to go along my cool for longer this fourth dimension effectually past improve understanding the nature of the campaign. The missions are non meant to be fair fights, merely puzzles pitting your superior human being brain to a limited AI armed with far more resources. I still don't like how long the game keeps introducing units as part of a drip-fed tutorial process, just taking my time and looking upwards tips and guides online, I'thousand enjoying the experience a lot more.

I tin foresee myself dipping in and out of this all the fashion up to the release of Reboot Military camp, mayhap fifty-fifty sampling the online content or the Double Trouble DLC pack depending on how long it takes me to beat the campaign. If yous've non tried it yourself, I'd recommend it just for the detailed and charming pixel sprites alone, but it'south also a good low-intensity palette cleansing game if you're getting fatigued with something else. — Richard Priday

Marshall Honorof is a senior editor for Tom's Guide, overseeing the site'south coverage of gaming hardware and software. He comes from a science writing groundwork, having studied paleomammalogy, biological anthropology, and the history of science and technology. After hours, you can observe him practicing taekwondo or doing deep dives on archetype sci-fi.

Source: https://www.tomsguide.com/news/what-to-play-little-nightmares-star-wars-wargroove

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