Reviews Spotlight: Transformers, Spewer, Backbreaker, and More

My goodness, is it Sunday already? I lost track of the time reading awesome reviews on extreme robots, vomiting lab experiments, burly football players, and many others. I'm in a sharing mood, so enjoy this week's Reviews Spotlight!


Transformers: War for CybertronEXTREME REVIEW — Transformers: War for Cybertron
By Rick Knight
No, Rick's Caps Lock key isn't stuck — his hilarious review of Transformers: War for Cybertron is filled with an extreme level of quips and witticisms that will leave you gasping for breath between bouts of laughter. Don't say the title didn't warn you.


I Am the Manta Review: Spewer
By Ben Maxwell
At a cursory glance, guiding a Kirby-shaped lab experiment with severe digestive problems through increasingly difficult levels isn't an alluring idea — a fact that Ben's well-written (and curiously titled) review of Spewer poignantly addresses. On the upside, vomit jokes rank as comedy gold on the Internet, so here's to Spewer's inevitable success!

 

Backbreaker Review
By Oren Giladi
Just like a sportscaster worth his weight in shoulder pads, Oren provides a blow-by-blow analysis of Backbreaker's expedient elements. Can the new entry into the football field topple the mighty Madden defense? Read the full review to find out!


Prince of Persia: The Forgotten SandsPrince of Persia: The Forgotten Sands Review
By Oren Giladi
Persian royalty just can't get a break — if half-naked Spartans aren't ridiculing them, those fickle sands of time are clogging their opulent palaces. Luckily, this particular Prince of Persia knows a thing or two about sand management. (Here's a hint — it usually involves a really big scimitar.) Read Oren's excellent review for all the gritty (pun intended) details.


Snoopy Flying Ace Review
By Steven Schmidt
A wise man once said, "Happiness is a warm puppy." That wise man was Charles Schulz, creator of the Peanuts comic strip, and the warm puppy is Snoopy, a character in Peanuts and star of Snoopy Flying Ace. Steven's review touches upon the game's pleasingly straightforward content worthy of the late Mr. Schulz's legacy.