C

This score is awarded to games that have received a calculated grade of C for their ultra-widescreen support. All of these games have some level of ultra-widescreen support but have significant issues.

The Tomorrow War

Space sim featuring a story written by popular Russian author Alexander Zorich.

Duke Nukem 3D: Megaton Edition

Take on an invading alien army in this updated version of the classic '90s FPS. Gum sold separately.

Hatred

This isometric-like 3D shooter answers the question nobody asked: what if the original Postal had been an entirely humorless, grimdark affair ? Powered by Unreal Engine 4, Hatred features seven open maps littered with destructible objects and mass murdery objectives. A 'drunk player' toggle and the so-called Antagonist's wobbly hair movement hint at the game not taking itself so seriously after all.

SimCity 3000

Manage your city or destroy it in the third game in the long-running SimCity series.

Moto Racer 15th Anniversary

New entry in the classic series. The Windows version of this game is only available as part of the Moto Racer Collection.

Need for Speed: Underground

Racing game about tuning cars.
All races take place in a generic city at night called Olympic City, though the city bears some resemblance to New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles.
Rather than exotic cars, Underground featured vehicles associated with the import scene.

Ride

This simcade racer pays homage to a hundred models of sport bikes produced between 1987 and 2015. Races take place over fifteen locales, including a selection of iconic GP tracks and fictional scenic roads. All bike models can be heavily customized with both cosmetic and mechanical upgrades... and there's a clothes shop for riders, too. In addition to an extensive World Tour and quick race mode, RIDE features two-player splitscreen and 12-player online events. The demo only showcases solo quick mode on one track (long and short variants) and three bikes.

Death Rally (2012)

The "revised remake" of the 1996 top-down racer was a huge hit on iOS. Although developed by Remedy, it shares so little DNA with its classic ancestor that it was met with a cold shoulder on our platform of choice.

The Mighty Quest for Epic Loot

The Mighty Quest for Epic Loot is a free-to-play real-time strategy video game developed by Ubisoft Montreal. The game combines castle defense and dungeon crawling mechanics, allowing players to build their own castle and to attack those built by other players in order to collect various in-game resources such as Crowns, Gold, and Gear.

The game requires U-Play, and leaves a client running even when you exit the game. The client shows as an icon in the System Tray. No idea why this is needed, or what data it is sending to Ubisoft.