B

This medal is awarded to games that have received a calculated grade of B for their widescreen support. All of these games are without major flaws, but either have at least one blemish that prevents a perfect score.

Alien: Isolation

Discover the true meaning of fear in Alien: Isolation, a survival horror set in an atmosphere of constant dread and mortal danger. Fifteen years after the events of Alien™, Ellen Ripley’s daughter, Amanda enters a desperate battle for survival, on a mission to unravel the truth behind her mother's disappearance.

Cryostasis: Sleep of Reason

Cryostasis: Sleep of Reason is a psychological horror video game developed by Action Forms for Microsoft Windows.

The game story develops with help of a unique system called Mental Echo - the ability to penetrate another character's memory and change the actions taken by that character in the past. This can involve saving people's lives by taking over their bodies in their memories and changing the course of history.[1]

The game, being set in an arctic setting, employs body heat as a health meter - the player must use heat sources (such as lights or stoves) to replenish health.

Space Hack

Protect a colony ship from an unknown alien threat in this sci-fi experience.

Space Hack was also released in the United Kingdom as Maximus XV: Abraham Strong - Space Mercenary and in Europe as Novasphere 13.

Trials Fusion

The follow-up to Trials Evolution features a more streamlined career, an all-new trick system and optional track-specific challenges.

Might & Magic X - Legacy

Might & Magic X - Legacy revives the tile-based gameplay of the RPGs of yore - namely Might and Magic III and the Xeen games, rather than the latter titles in the series. Legacy's world and plot are not in direct relation with New World Computing's classic Might and Magic RPGs, though but loosely linked to turn-based strategy game Might & Magic Heroes 6 and even to Dark Messiah.

Urban Trial Freestyle

It sure looks a lot like that other trial game, but Urban Trial Freestyle does a few things differently. Each track layout must be beat in pure beat-the-clock mode, then with additional challenges to perform at set points along the way. Collecting money bags scattered around the tracks will let you buy parts and assemble the best bike for each track and game mode. The physics are a bit stiff, too - so you won't be doing dozens of flips off any old ramp. Also of note is a storyline about being rebellious, apparently. See ? Different.

Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs

The strange case of the un-sequel: dumping all of the mythos, gameplay elements and moddability that made The Dark Descent a success, the Dear Esther guys introduced Frictional's HPL2 engine to their own vision of adventure: a stroll through narration with buttons to push. A radical, disturbing experience with multiple levels of interpretation...

Expeditions: Conquistador

Turn-based strategy meets survival: one does not simply gather armies and gallivant around the hostile, uncharted lands of the New World.

Air Conflicts: Vietnam

Vietnam is a turning point in the Air Conflicts series, with jets and helicopters replacing the WW2-era aircraft of previous games. Unfortunately the new flight model comes with simplified controls and smallish maps, so Air Conflicts: Vietnam is not quite the definitive Vietnam War arcade flight sim it could have been. It is however not short on aircraft models or game modes, including a story-driven campaign, skirmish mode, and LAN & online multiplayer. A distinctive feature, squadron management lets you "jump" and take control of any unit under your command at any time.

Waking Mars

Empirical Extraterrestrial Environment Exploitation: that's 4 Es for one 2.5D game of seed-tossing, jetpack-powered SCIENCE.