Empire of Sin Reviews

Empire of Sin is ranked in the 20th percentile of games scored on OpenCritic.
5 / 10.0
Dec 10, 2020

I can’t for the life of me recommend Empire of Sin without giving it more time to iron out its issues. Gameplay-wise, it is quite enjoyable, but that enjoyable aspect gets drowned out in all the issues it has. Wait for them to fix the game until you decide to get it, and possibly a free story expansion with more icons to play with.

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5 / 10.0
Aug 15, 2021

Maybe you can forgive the game for its horrible repetition, boring, practically zero story and useless diplomacy, which probably serves only as a gameplay enhancement. What you get is a promising title that's really great for the first few hours. But unfortunately, really only for the first few hours. It's a huge shame, because this title could have been just as great as, say, the aforementioned XCOM 2. Empire of Sin has great graphics and a 1920s atmosphere that could be sliced up. This experience is accentuated by the great historical music. However, the positive aspects of the game end there.

Review in Czech | Read full review

7 / 10.0
Jan 4, 2021

Empire of Sin does little to brew up any revolutionary changes to the genre, but it makes for a fun time if you enjoy strategy and historical settings.

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Lords Of Gaming
Chris Jones
6.9 / 10.0
Feb 1, 2023

Empire of Sin has plenty of good ideas from the great 1920s Chicago setting and atmosphere. From a great diplomacy system that can make or break your playthrough at certain times in the game, to turn-based combat which I love in games shows some promise. But the game is mired by lackluster map design, bad AI, unbalanced abilities, and some clunky controls. I did enjoy the roleplaying aspect of being able to lead a criminal empire as a historically inspired gangster. Empire of Sin manages to capture ambition beautifully in its empire management systems, and its allure of everything is strong.

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5.5 / 10.0
Dec 9, 2020

Empire of Sin has good ideas hobbled by poor execution and painfully repetitive gameplay.

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8 / 10.0
Dec 2, 2020

Empire of Sin is a great example of how you can use the prohibition era in games. A pleasant, rather simple strategy that does not lack combat and interesting gang management.

Review in Polish | Read full review

5 / 10
Feb 10, 2021

The first hours of the game had a lot to offer, but the gameplay quickly became repetitive, and all the smaller and larger mistakes began to surface, which in the end hurt the Empire of Sin more than it should.

Review in Czech | Read full review

5.5 / 10.0
Dec 8, 2020

“Empire of Sin is great when every mechanic and system are in its place and in perfect harmony. Sadly, these moments are few and far between. At this point its just a very great game in theory. Maybe Romero Games will make it better with expansions and updates, but that remains to be seen”.

Review in Portuguese | Read full review

5.5 / 10.0
Jan 13, 2021

MEDIOCRE - Empire of Sin wants you to be the Mob Boss in all of Chicago. From managing relationships, to hostile takeovers, running an underground economy, and with an X-Com inspired combat system layered on top for action moments, this game has all the right makings for a top-notch prohibition management game. However, the menus are cluttered, heavy, and an unnecessary time sink, and the combat is just too light with clunky opponents, making the whole experience a bit awkward for me to really love.

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7 / 10.0
Dec 24, 2020

Despite the game issues, I had a fun time managing my empire, making deals with other bosses, and laughing at the discourse between people. Sure, the combat was weird at times, but it's not really difficult. And even though I played Empire of Sin for a decent amount of time, I can't in good conscience rate it very high. It needs some more time to hammer out the bugs and give players a few more options - or breathing room. Overall, I give this title a 7 out of 10.

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Avoid
Dec 24, 2020
Empire of Sin (Quick Review) [PC] video thumbnail
5 / 10.0
Dec 20, 2020

Empire of Sin is in a better state now than how it was at launch, with several fixes to its UI and performance, but this is still too much for the Switch to handle. I’m not talking solely about its still-underwhelming performance, but also the fact that it tries to be an excessive amount of games at once, without ever exploring all of its features to a reasonable degree.

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3 / 5.0
Dec 18, 2020

At its heart, Empire of Sin does a little of everything and does none of it well.

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Dec 15, 2020

Empire of Sin was first introduced at E3 2019 as a 1920s Chicago based strategy role playing game. You can choose any of the 14 mob bosses and build your empire. Among the bosses are some real historical villains like Al Capone and a few unique characters created just for this game.

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3 / 5.0
Dec 16, 2020

Empire of Sin is a good game held back only by a lack of variety in ways to win, leaving most forms of diplomacy and expansion feeling useless long-term.

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70 / 100
Dec 14, 2020

If you're a fan of gangster genres, strategy, and management, the Empire of Sin will make an undeniable offer to you.

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5 / 10.0
Dec 9, 2020

The music is lovely and it controls quite nicely on consoles but that's all the good things about Empire of Sin because the core gameplay feels very simple and willy-nilly designed and the amount of bugs and glitches are unbelievable.

Review in Persian | Read full review

Unscored
Nov 30, 2020

Empire of Sin is a great conjunction of different genres perfectly balanced each in its own right. It is a deep, dynamic game that can satisfy strategy lovers, fans of turn-based fighting games and fans of resource management alike as it has rarely been seen. The truth is that I find it difficult to find a similar game to compare his great mix of mechanics.

Review in Spanish | Read full review

8 / 10.0
Dec 3, 2020

While the flaws in Empire of Sin are significant, they are not enough to take the shine away from this Romero Games title. The bold proposal to mix different genres and moments in a game only ends up making the experience varied and interesting, especially for fans of the theme and genres contemplated here. When you spend time with the game, you get the impression that it would benefit from a little more development time. Still, creating and maintaining an empire of respect is as fun as it sounds. Honestly, I hope that the developers and the publisher continue to support the franchise - there is undeniable potential here.

Review in Portuguese | Read full review

Avoid
Dec 3, 2020

With some more time ageing this could have been a cult hit, but right now playing Empire of Sin is an offer you probably should refuse.

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