Fermi’s Path and Guns, Gore & Cannoli are both out now on Xbox One. Fermi’s Path costs $10 and is 436 MB. Guns, Gore & Cannoli also costs $10 and is more than 4 GB. Both of these titles were hotly anticipated and I can’t wait to try out both.
Fermi’s Path
In this action-loaded arcade game you play the role of Fermi, a particle on a terrific trip through subatomic space. Driven by the music you have to avoid obstacles and eliminate incoming particles on ever-accelerating levels to crack the top score! After mastering each level you can play it in infinity mode in an open-end highscore.
Key Features:
• Many levels with increasing difficulty and speed
• Infinity-mode
• Secret paths with special challenges and even more bonus points
• Various obstacles and hostile particles
• Many weapon upgrades
• Catchy electro soundtrack
Guns, Gore & Cannoli
Welcome to Thugtown circa 1920, the height of Prohibition. Prepare yourself for a non-stop, action-packed, completely over-the-top, fast-pased, platform game. Set against the gangster heyday of the roaring twenties. Lose yourself in an exciting, elaborate tale of the underground and underworld. Experience friendship, betrayal, vengeance, and witness first hand the rise and fall of a criminal mastermind. This is survival horror, wiseguy style…Capiche? “Leave the gun, take the cannoli…actually, on second thought, take the gun and eat the cannoli, you’re gonna need it.” The game tells the story of Vinnie Cannoli and his mob family, set in the fictional Thugtown circa 1925, the height of prohibition. Beneath the city overrun by zombies, there’s a dark story of conspiracy and betrayal. Unravel the sneaky mafia ways and government conspiracy while you try to look for your lost pal and for answers about the zombie-outbreak.
Asher is a games journalist, former News Writer (Gaming) at Windows Central. They contributed 1110 articles to ICXM between 2015–2017, focused on opinion pieces, game reviews, Windows and PC, and Xbox news: wrote over 1,100 ICXM pieces on Xbox news, hardware reviews, and platform commentary before joining Future plc’s Windows Central in 2017.

