Warframe got a tie-in comic that will run as a short mini-series published by Top Cow Comics from Matt Hawkins, Ryan Cady, and Studio Hive.
Review Archives
Review for Dark Days: The Casting, the second prelude comic for DC event, Metal. By Scott Snyder, James Tynion IV, Jim Lee, Andy Kubert and many more.
Simprose Studios has delivered a stripped down, challenging retro-style RPG with Catacombs 1: Demon War. Just, be prepared to kill some rats.
Have you ever wondered what like would be like being The Wolf in Pulp Fiction? Running from job to job, getting rid of bodies and making sure your clients
Fortress Festoon is a new column we're going to present to you every now and then. This month we look at Think Geek's collection of gaming-related lighting!
In The Wicked + The Divine #29, we see things really start to fall about. The shit hit the fan, and now the characters have to deal with the mess.
X-Men Gold #7 is one of the better Secret Empire tie-ins, because it largely ignores the thrust of the event and uses the setting for its own story needs.
Fat Dog Games and Sigma Games' Inner Voices is a horror puzzle game, with a decent side helping of exploration, but the mystery is the real selling point.
Pixelated Milk and Klabater's Regalia: of Men and Monarchs is an incredibly enjoyable, quirky RPG that evokes the same feeling as a tabletop game.
Overall, I loved this show. And I'm very happy it's already been greenlit for season two, which means we're getting an animated version of Castlevania III.
'Kim and Kim' is a beautiful, funny, moving book that sucks you in, high fives you, gives you a shot, then throws you through a window — and you don't mind.
It took more than 13 years, but we finally have a Spider-Man that's the closest to the flavor of the classic comic character that we've seen thus far.
Loose Ends exists in this world between Richard Linklater, Martin Scorsese, Jim Jarmusch, True Romance and True Detective.
A Ghost Story approaches the question of ‘what happens after we die’ and presents an interesting look through the eyes of someone standing under a sheet.
Review of Batman #26 from DC Comics by Tom King, Mikel Janín and June Chung. The tension continues to ramp up the tension and sides get chosen