Featured Review

Review: Toshiba Portege R700
ASIO Having recently celebrated the 25th anniversary of the laptop, Toshiba has delivered a clutch of new notebooks to the market. The Portege name has long been recognised as one of the premiere small notebooks on the market. We took their latest model, the R700, out for a spin. ...read more

Review: Max Payne 3

Max is back, this time with the power of Rockstar Game’s impressive development team behind him, but he is still a failure.  Max Payne 3 chronicles the further slide of the character that brought the video game world ‘bullet time’ and crime noir grit, and it packs a punch.

Review: Billion BiPAC P108

Powerline networking has reached the point where it just works.  Mostly.  The Billion BiPAC P108 achieves that.

Review: Prototype 2

Still feel like being a virtual badass? Even after you had a feast of recent games such as infamous 2 and Batman: Arkham City, well perhaps it is time to wheel out Prototype 2

Review: Crimson Steam Pirates

Steam-punk sea battles with blimps, swashbuckling heroes, Tesla coils, teleportation and other Jules Verne inspired imagery and adventure.

Quick Hits: Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning

Sprinting around the countryside of Amalur is certainly a different experience from that of trudging around the world of Skyrim, and that is ok, despite the back-of-the-box description that may lead you to think this is a majestic RPG in line with Bethesda's opus Reckoning takes its major influences from elsewhere.

Review: Burnout Crash! for iOS

For those that missed out on the guilty pleasures of Burnout Crash! on PlayStation 3 or Xbox 360 can now cause carnage on their iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch with the new iOS version of the game.

Review: Binary Domain

Here is a title from Sega that may get lost in the crowd.  One that starts shakily when viewed through Western eyes, but ultimately redeems itself as a competent, fun-loving yet challenging shooter with a lot to offer.  Welcome hollow child to the Binary Domain.

Review: Journey

The fastest selling video game on the PlayStation Network, has no dialogue, a short life span, no guns, not too much in the way of fantastical creatures and little to no sex or violence.  Yet it is one of the most thought provoking mainstream releases for a long time.  The name says it all, it is a Journey.

Review: Navman MY Escape

The top of the MY Series line of Navman specialist navigation units packs a broad range of features aimed at an equally broad range of uses.  The MY Escape is equally at ease whether it is finding the location of a suburban kid's birthday party as it is out on the not-so-beaten AWD tracks of the Australian bush.

Review: Toshiba AT1S0 tablet

  It's boxy, but it's good.  Mostly.  

Review: Mass Effect 3 - A satisfying end?

The Reapers have come to Earth, and despite having a galaxy of friendly and well-armed allies, only Commander Shepard is equipped to save the human race in this final instalment of the Mass Effect trilogy.

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