A Story About My Uncle

First-person without the shooting in this nonviolent platform game

Most first-person games immediately stick a gun in the bottom part of your screen. Developers seem to believe that the only exciting agency a player has in virtual worlds is to destroy them and kill the people populating them. A Story About My Uncle joins a small, but growing band of first-person games that ditch the shooting, for the better.

Modern Combat 5: Blackout

MODERN COMBAT 5: BLACKOUT A fully-fledged first-person shooter on your phone

A fully-fledged first-person shooter on your phone or tablet

On technical grounds, it's pretty hard as a gamer not to simply be amazed by Modern Combat 5 – it is, pretty much, a fully-functioned, first-person shooter to rival Call Of Duty and Battlefield, only on your phone rather than a dedicated home console.

That's not just talking in terms of visuals – although they're the most immediately impressive thing about the game. As well as the graphics, there's the amount of single-player missions, the multi-player and the plethora of side-quests, weapons upgrades and loadout options available also.

Sniper Elite III

Action, if not morality, in the sights of this sniping action game

Sometimes virtual violence can simply be fun, even morally dubious violence. Sniper Elite III is pretty reprehensible and fairly morally indefensible. It gleefully glamorises violence. Yet throughout, it's fun. Really good fun.

Murdered: Soul Suspect

This ghostly detective adventure could have been intriguing…

A detective ghost story with virtually no violence – Murdered: Soul Suspect is an odd construction. It is part point-and-click adventure game, part interactive fiction and part stealth-adventure – none of which are massively successful elements.

While investigating The Bell Killer, a serial killer working his way throughSalem,Massachusetts, your clichéd cop comes off the worse for an encounter. Thrown out of a high window, then shot, you come to as a ghost. Now, in order to be head off into the light, you must find out who your killer is.

Watch Dogs

GAME OF THE WEEK: WATCH DOGS Hacking a grim Chicago in morally confused action-adventure

Hacking a grim Chicago in this morally confused action-adventure

Heralded as the first true "next-generation" videogame, Watch Dogs has either been hugely overhyped or the imaginative leap required for a true new generation of videogaming is entirely absent from mainstream games. Because this cyberpunk-inflected hacking action-adventure offers virtually nothing new.

Transistor

A visually striking action-adventure with a tad too much complex combat

Videogames aesthetics are often misleading. There are many examples of beautiful games that have no artistic merit, emotional heft or ludological interest. There are also many examples of ugly games that grip utterly. Of course, the ideal is both simultaneously – and Transistor almost does that.

Chronology

CHRONOLOGY Time travelling platform games seem to be everywhere and when these days...

Time travelling platform games seem to be everywhere and when these days...

It's time to talk about time travel. The fourth dimension, as time is sometimes called, represents fertile ground for videogames designers. After all, the shift from side-scrolling two-dimensions (move left, right, jump up, fall down) to three was a huge leap.

Child Of Light

GAME OF THE WEEK: CHILD OF LIGHT A deftly balanced role-playing game with beautiful visual design – what's not to like?

A deftly balanced role-playing game with beautiful visual design – what's not to like?

There are many admirable things about Child Of Light. It's the game that the core team behind Far Cry 3 – the mega-action, gnarly dude first-person shooter ‑ went on to work on next. Yet, it's difficult to imagine two games further from each other.

inFamous: Second Son

INFAMOUS: SECOND SON A superhero action game for the blank generation

A superhero action game for the blank generation

Superheroes and videogames should be a match made in heaven – the primary colour characterisations; the non-stop action and combat; the backstories sketched on a napkin, but then gradually filled in over multiple issues; the superpowers, analogous to classic videogame "power-ups". It's strange then, that videogame superheroes have had such a tough time of it in general.

Titanfall

TITANFALL The most hyped action game of the 'next generation' is dumb but fun

The most hyped action game of the 'next generation' is dumb, but great fun

Flow states – experienced by athletes, religious zealots and videogamers playing Titanfall. This explosive action game is the most eagerly anticipated and hyped-up videogame of the "next generation" console war so far. It could singlehandedly transform Microsoft's slow start for its new Xbox One console. And while being deeply dull and reactionary in many ways, it encourages a gaming flow state of constant fun like little else in some time.