Drew Onia
Staff Bio
Articles by Drew Onia:
Insomnis review
Insomnis is a beautiful, spooky, haunted house romp. The puzzles are challenging and the atmosphere is perfect.
NeonLore review
Though missing the mark in terms of consistent quality, this game's thesis does come through, and NeonLore will undoubtedly appeal to cyberpunk fans.
Lost at Sea review
It takes on a bold concept, and through well-designed puzzles provides a memorable experience. If only for the parts that feel underdeveloped, the game could have been unforgettable.
Pants Quest review
The pace never slacks in this brief but overall entertaining pixel art adventure about a stressful rainy morning before work.
KAPIA review
It could use a little more refinement, but this charming postapocalyptic adventure is as fun as it is funky, and a top choice for gamers of all ages.
Krulk review
Us like sideways caveman adventure. Look weird but good. Bugs big but puzzles better.
Imaginaria review
More an educational tour than full-fledged adventure, one night's patrol in remote Antarctica is nevertheless worth a look for those who enjoy more subtle narrative experiences.
Liberated review
A slick graphic novel-style story presentation can't escape the tedium of its side-scrolling action in this gritty neo-noir thriller.
Vile Matter review
This very short escape-room horror adventure isn't vile matter so much as it is a mediocre diversion that means little more than an hour or so of puzzling.
Døm Rusalok review
This post-Soviet side-scrolling adventure provides a compelling pixel art horror ambience, though some punishing technical issues are unearthed along the way.
Hadr review
Making objects vanish with a magician's cloth is a clever conceit while it lasts, though any real challenge disappears right along with them.
Lacuna review
Though plenty compelling the first time through, you'll want to replay this slickly designed choice-driven sci-fi murder mystery at least once to fill in all the gaps.
Lust from Beyond review
More action-oriented and rough around the edges, the extremely graphic sequel to Lust for Darkness should still fulfill any deep yearning for erotic horror thrills.
Sanity of Morris review
Its relative ease and a few rough edges may threaten to drive you crazy, but this conspiracy-tinged thriller is an otherwise enjoyable stealth-adventure hybrid.
Werewolf: The Apocalypse – Heart of the Forest review
Its role-playing elements add real bite to an already compelling story in this supernatural visual novel based on the popular tabletop RPG.