Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology. The long-awaited CounterSpy V2 ranks just below the best ...
CounterSpy, a new action-stealth side-scroller for PlayStation 4, PS3 and Vita by San Francisco startup Dynamighty, starts off impressive enough, dazzling you with stylish military bunkers littered ...
Designed as a love letter to classic side-scrolling arcade games, “CounterSpy” blends the worlds of “The Incredibles,” early James Bond movies and “Dr. Strangelove” with stylized ‘60s animated glee.
Counterspy is the first game from independent developer Dynamighty but that fact alone probably wouldn’t raise any eyebrows. On the contrary, the fact that the development team is comprised of ...
Very long load times on PS Vita Random level generation sometimes breaks the game Gunplay lacks depth, is too often the focus “Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, ...
CounterSpy offers a light-hearted take on the Cold War, but it probably needed some more time to cook. While the Cold War has appeared as the setting for a large swath of games, the conflict is ...
The Cold War sticks out in history as a huge period in time that touched everyone on the planet, so it’s no surprise that so many works of art have been made about it. CounterSpy lets you ride the ...
Check out our Reviews Vault for past game reviews. It’s time to find the lighter side of mutually assured destruction. Dynamighty’s Counterspy is a short foray into espionage as a triple-agent working ...
Release Date: August 20 (Europe), August 19 (North America) Platforms available on: PS4, PS3, Vita Developer: Dynamighty Publisher: Sony Genre: Stealth platformer CounterSpy is a stylish Cold War ...
GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers. CounterSpy is a slick operation. The stop-and-go nature of your average stealth game often makes it difficult to strike a balance between proper ...
It seems strange -- even counter-intuitive -- but as one of my history professors used to say, learning history is five percent memorizing dates, times, and other facts, and 95 percent interpreting ...