Ranked, Reorderable Lists
Create public ranked lists, reorder instantly, and help others discover your taste in RPGs, indies, and classics.

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What if *Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater* had come out on the Atari 2600? Atari’s *720 Degrees* is the answer. In this game, you play as a skater who has to tackle various skating sections in a race against the clock. I played this title on the Game Boy Color and honestly found it pretty impressive, considering the hardware limitations. That said, I definitely can’t say it’s one of the most fun or intuitive games out there. Basically, there are only two modes: **training** and **expert**. The training mode is extremely short, and you’re almost immediately thrown into expert mode, where you fight against the clock trying to earn as much money as possible, even though I’m not really sure why. I’m also not sure why I’m supposed to be racing against time in the first place—I’m a skater, I should be chilling, and yet apparently not. In fact, if the countdown reaches zero, you’re chased down by some kind of weird pixelated monstrosity that kills you, leaving you with fewer and fewer chances to come back. Basically, you move around the main hub, and in less than a minute you’re told to rush to a skate park by a heavily compressed pre-recorded voice yelling, “Skate or die!”, and you have to make it to one of the skating areas before time runs out. Each area features a different skating style, so there’s downhill, ramp skating, and slalom. Honestly, I didn’t try the other modes. In the main hub, you can also buy skate gear, although to be honest it didn’t seem to make any difference at all. The controls are both good and bad. Pressing **B** makes you push forward, while **A** lets you jump. The game also gives you the option to either move your character left and right with the directional pad, or move them directly in the direction of the arrows. In both cases, though, the controls are fairly difficult to manage because the character moves way too fast for a skater. Still, I find the whole concept really, really interesting—again, especially because this is a very old game.

Should be law to play this game. it should be enforced.

The concept is very simple, you're a plane and you have to shoot every damn Nazi in front of you.This is Capcom's 1942, a classic that I remember playing multiple times, especially in the Arcade version?In this reconversion of the Game Boy Color I practically had the same experiences as in all the other versions, boredom included.I say boring because the gameplay variety boils down to enemy patterns that gradually become more difficult to deal with.I was hoping for some changes as the game progressed, but it's pretty much the same.Of course I didn't get to the final boss, I remember there being a giant plane as the first final boss.But still the repetitiveness of the game didn't make me want to continue for more than 10 minutes.I have to appreciate the excellent porting though, which is very faithful to the original. There are Power-ups that make you bigger and bigger and consequently give you many more bullets.So a classic arcade game whose main challenge is trying to beat your own high score.I'm giving it two and a half stars only because it's a Capcom classic, otherwise I would have given it less.

Un jeu de chat franchement c’est sympa, c’est mignon le mood est bon c’est cool et détente, histoire sympa.
Most anticipated games now available to play



All games i finished in 2026



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Top 20 games that I have completed

Spawnr combines a social review platform, backlog manager, and ranking engine so players can track every game and discover their next obsession.
Create public ranked lists, reorder instantly, and help others discover your taste in RPGs, indies, and classics.
Track completion status, ratings, play sessions, and spoiler-safe reviews in one social profile.
Organize what to play next, what is on hold, and what you dropped with a clean backlog workflow.
Find new hits using reviews, recency signals, and community-created lists across genres and platforms.
Why Spawnr
If you have searched for a Backloggd alternative, a game diary app, or an elegant way to track what you play, Spawnr gives you social reviews, ranking lists, and a shareable profile in one place.
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gordon.freeman@spawnr.esEverything players ask before joining Spawnr.
Spawnr is a social video game tracker and diary where you log games, rate and review them, manage your backlog, and share ranked lists with friends.
Yes. Spawnr is designed for gamers who want a Letterboxd-style experience for video games, with stronger mobile support, social discovery, and list-first curation.
Yes. Core features like tracking, reviewing, and list building are free. Additional premium personalization and analytics can be added over time.
Absolutely. Your profile, reviews, and curated lists are built to be shared so others can follow your gaming taste and recommendations.
Spawnr is built for players who want to log video games, write reviews, track completion status, organize a backlog, and publish ranked lists. Whether you call it a game tracker, a Letterboxd for games, or a Backloggd alternative, Spawnr is designed to help you document your gaming journey and discover what to play next through real community activity.