Destruction AllStars
Top Critic Average
Critics Recommend
Destruction AllStars Trailers
Destruction AllStars - Mayhem Starts Now Launch Trailer l PS5
Destruction AllStars - Gameplay Trailer l PS5
Destruction AllStars - Announcement Trailer | PS5
Critic Reviews for Destruction AllStars
Out of the gate, Destruction AllStars is shallow and struggles to give players a compelling reason to stick with it for the long-term. But like other live service games, it's possible that Destruction AllStars will improve as the developers address fan feedback and add more meaningful content to the game. The foundation is there for Destruction AllStars to eventually be great, with reliable performance, beautiful graphics, and fun core gameplay, but there's a long way to go if it ever wants to reach that point.
Destruction AllStars can provide fun bursts of frantic car combat action, but never adds up to much more than that.
In desperate need of depth and content, Destruction AllStars is at least a fun whiz around the corner.
I wanted to love Destruction AllStars. I still do. There’s just not enough there to make it worth my while right now. A couple of times, I ran into a weird technical issue where I would jump into a brand-new car, but it just wouldn’t move. I think that issues like this can certainly be fixed in a future patch, though. I also know that the development team of Lucid Games has a year’s-worth of content planned for the game. As such, although I can’t recommend playing Destruction AllStars right now, I do have high hopes for the future of the game. Especially since the car combat genre is ripe for the taking with no new Twisted Metal in sight.
Destruction AllStars' frantic blend of bumper-car and on-foot action offers plenty of short-term fun, but the thrills are less thrilling after a few hours
Destruction AllStars has solid driving, but its demolition derby-style car combat drags as much as it thrills.
Destruction AllStars made me feel like a kid playing with Hot Wheels, it's just a shame how often it falls off the tracks.
A fun, uncomplicated romp that's a great way to relax for 20 minutes or so. Beyond that though it struggles to entertain, especially given the grubby approach to microtransactions.