• TripleA (PC)

    ...TripleA offers dozens of different Axis & Allies scenarios to play, from ones based off the actual WotC games to fan-created versions for the Napoleonic Wars, American Civil War and...

  • Dragon Warrior (NES)

    ...Dragon Quest in Japan somehow actually managed to be worse than the American release. Well, OK, it’s likely that the Japanese RPG scene would have turned out the same, even...

  • This Day in GameCola History: September 8th

    ...receive a North American release? Only time will tell! It hasn’t received one yet, but there’s still hope, right? September 8th, 2010—Captain Eric’s Psychic Thumb Feature Presentation That’s right! Captain...

  • Exile trilogy (PC)

    ...until next month? GameCola’s new shift means you’ll have a reason to check us out every day. That means more $$$ for us (for lack of an American cent symbol...

  • Carbonated News: E3 2009 Preview

    ...show-stopping musical numbers, and Meteo can grow facial hair at will. Dead Rising 2: Great, I haven’t played the original version of this game, either. Anyway, it’s a mixture of...

  • First-Person View: To Shoot or not to Shoot

    ...him and kill Harper (an American ally captured by Menendez). The game gives me the option of either carry on the command, or to disobey and shoot Menendez who is...

  • The 2023 GameCola Videogame Awards (Part 2)

    ...simply, Humanity is a puzzle game, although saying that is a disservice because it’s so much more. Perhaps it’s better to say that Humanity is a game that has quite...

  • Mega Man 2 (NES)

    ...American whose gaming skill is vastly inferior to that of a Japanese toddler” (mislabeled as “Normal”). In the watered-down version, your weapons do more damage to the bosses, and certain...

  • Wild Arms 3 (PS2)

    ...and then there’s the Native American shaman with a sawed-off shotgun who’s surprisingly useless in battle. Basically, this game is just a wild west Dragon Warrior. That’s what it eventually...

  • Mega Man (NES)

    Long ago, there was a time when Zero was merely the amount of fashion sense the average American had, when Battle Network was just a pet name for the TV...