Chad Sapieha picks his favourite games from the last 12 months, from January's LittleBigPlanet 2 to December's Star Wars: The Old Republic.
The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, a vast fantasy role-playing game with one of the most immersive virtual worlds ever created. We think it's the best game of 2011
Batman: Arkham City, an open-world multiplatform game that ranks among the very best super hero adaptations
Portal 2, an ingenius puzzler featuring some of the most memorable characters ever to appear in a game
Gears of War 3, the gritty and occasionally moving final chapter in one of Xbox 360's best exclusive series
Minecraft, an indie game for PCs that allows players to create virtually anything they can imagine using materials mined within its virtual world
The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword, an action/adventure RPG for Wii that sees Link questing through cleverly designed dungeons while chasing after the titular heroine
Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception, a truly cinematic game that feels like a 12-hour movie controlled by players
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, a powerful new entry in the franchise that remains safely at the top of the heap of military first-person shooters
L.A. Noire, a period piece detective saga that takes facial animation and performance capture to new levels
Forza Motorsport 4 for Xbox 360, the new champion of driving simulation games
The Gunstringer for Xbox 360, a genuinely witty Kinect-only game that puts players at the strings of a cowboy marionette
Infinity Blade II, a sword-slashing iOS game released near the end of the year, provides further proof that Apple's hardware can serve as an effective platform for hardcore games
The Binding of Isaac, a short but provocative independent game for PCs
LittleBigPlanet 2, a game that gives players the power to build their own interactive experiences and share them with others. Exclusive to PlayStation 3
Mario Kart 7, a stereoscopic racing game for Nintendo 3DS that's fun for all ages
Professor Layton and the Last Specter, a terrific puzzle game for Nintendo DS with a charming, gentlemanly lead
Star Wars: The Old Republic, an enormous and unusually story-driven MMORPG set in a galaxy far, far away
Super Mario 3D Land for Nintendo 3DS, a short but brilliant platformer that combines the best parts of Mario games old and new
The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings, a visually sumptuous and decidedly mature role-playing game currently available only for PCs
Bastion, an Xbox Live Arcade adventure with an ever-present narrator whose soothing voice provides a running commentary on game events
Child of Eden, an immersive movement-based shooter for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 with kalaidoscopic visual effects and a pulsing soundtrack
Dead Space 2, a sci-fi horror game for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 that delivers plenty of shocks as well as moments of chilling psychological terror
Deus Ex: Human Revolution, a sci-fi role-playing game that provides players nearly unparalleled freedom to play in the style of their choosing
Dragon Age II, a role-playing game that sees players spending much of their time in compelling, branching conversations that mold their character's personality