Last Week's Comics Last Week’s Comics 12/20/2017 By Sara Clemens and Michael Edwards • December 20th, 2017 Team Unwinnable shares their thoughts on The Wicked + The Divine: Christmas Annual and the new classic, Runaways: The Complete Collection Volume 1.
Spilled Ink Old Dog, Old Tricks – Bungo Stray Dogs Vol. 5 By Austin Price • December 20th, 2017 Surely there are better ways to hype up the newest group of antagonists than to throw them a humiliating loss at the hands of the world’s most expendable mook.
Cardboard Fallout is Worth its Weight in Caps By Levi Rubeck • December 19th, 2017 These days I think about the collapse of civilization quite a lot, but this version of Fallout carries the series’s radioactive torch of wasteland fun.
MegaSphere: Exclusion by Design By Khee Hoon Chan • December 19th, 2017 MegaSphere is a homage, a throwback to retro 2D platformers of yore, carrying with it a yearning for days when videogame victories were hard-won and required a degree of game literacy.
Letter from the Editor Unwinnable Monthly – December 2017 By Stu Horvath • December 18th, 2017 Stu’s got the list of who has been naughty and nice in the December issue of Unwinnable Monthly! (spoiler: everyone is nice and so are all this month’s stories)
An Exercise in Being Prey By David Shimomura • December 18th, 2017 They Are Billions is a game about becoming a bigger, fatter, juicer piece of meat and being surrounded by starving hordes.
Terry Crews, Silence Breaker By Alyse Stanley • December 15th, 2017 When the Time Magazine Silence Breakers cover was revealed, I was shocked by the person I didn’t see: Terry Crews.
Gingy's Corner Brilliant Shadows: Magic and Introspection By Gingy Gibson • December 15th, 2017 Brilliant Shadows – Part One of the Book of Gray Magic is a sweet VN about introspection. Also there’s magic, but mostly the introspection and searching thing.
How Wrestling is Embracing New Masculinity By Liam Lambert • December 14th, 2017 As little as five years ago, it’s hard to imagine that a character could tie another man up in the ring ropes, slap him around, and yell “say my name” in his face, and be cheered for doing so.
Simplicity Rules in El Dorado By Sam Desatoff • December 14th, 2017 What makes El Dorado so good is its simplicity. A mashup of two different genres has the potential to become clunky and confusing, but that is not the case here.