Everybody's Gone to the Rapture Reviews

Everybody's Gone to the Rapture is ranked in the 75th percentile of games scored on OpenCritic.
8.5 / 10.0
Aug 9, 2015

When it comes to immersive experiences Everybody's Gone to the Rapture is definitely one worth exploring and will leave you pondering it even after you've finished. It's a nostalgic, sci-fi mystery and is one of the finest indie games to grace the PlayStation 4 in 2015.

Read full review

IGN
Top Critic
8.5 / 10.0
Aug 10, 2015

Everybody's Gone to the Rapture excels at building a dense world, evocative tone, and rich cast of characters. Its five hours are filled with some really great exploration, discovery, and memorable moments. Piecing together its web of heartbreak, loss, and ultimate revelation provides a great experience. Everybody's Gone to the Rapture rewarded my patience with a fulfilling journey.

Read full review

9 / 10
Aug 10, 2015

Everybody's Gone to the Rapture is a masterwork – a gorgeous and subtle experience, which treats you as an adult, without ever indulging in pretence. It cares about its characters enough to give them interesting and meaningful things to say, while also playing host to some truly breathtaking art direction and music.

Read full review

6.5 / 10.0
Aug 10, 2015

Everybody's Gone to the Rapture spins a good yarn, but it does nearly all the spinning, leaving little for the player. Its impact falls flat after trudging slowly across a world with little of substance for players to find, explore, or interpret.

Read full review

7 / 10.0
Aug 10, 2015

Everybody's Gone to the Rapture contains astounding humanity beneath its flaws

Read full review

USgamer
Top Critic
Aug 10, 2015

Is Everybody's Gone to the Rapture a game, an experimental piece of interactive fiction, or is it perhaps even art? Whatever it is, the experience it delivers is a memorable one. It's gorgeous to look at, fantastic to listen to, and spins an intelligent and somewhat esoteric sci-fi mystery that's truly gripping through to its very end.

Read full review

9 / 10
Aug 10, 2015

The studio behind Dear Esther and Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs have achieved audiovisual and narrative excellence with their latest adventure.

Read full review

9 / 10.0
Aug 10, 2015

It won't be for everyone, but for those that love Everybody's Gone to the Rapture, it'll stay in the memory for a very long time indeed.

Read full review

8 / 10.0
Aug 10, 2015

[I]f you're looking for an interesting method of storytelling full of drama, then you will want to check out Everybody's Gone To The Rapture. This is a video game as a piece of literature. Some may call it art, but I like to think gaming has evolved beyond such a contemporary definition. The Chinese Room had a story to tell, and they have done so in such a unique fashion that I eagerly await their next adventure.

Read full review

Yes
Aug 10, 2015

An enjoyable funeral walk through a depopulated English countryside, chasing beams of light.

Read full review

87 / 100
Aug 10, 2015

Everybody's Gone to the Rapture is a triumph.

Read full review

96 / 100
Aug 10, 2015

Everybody's Gone to the Rapture's greatest accomplishment is making you care for its departed characters. Their personal stories give you an incredible glimpse of what life was like in their little corner of the world. They're not the nicest group of people. They can be selfish, stubborn, and downright stupid. But that's what makes them feel real and memorable. The most tragic part? You can't do a damned thing to save them.

Read full review

8.2 / 10.0
Aug 10, 2015

Everybody's Gone to the Rapture is about discovering a story on your own, piecing together the details as you stroll through the countryside. What begins with curiosity in trying to explain what exactly happened soon gets you wrapped up in the lives of who it happened to.

Read full review

7 / 10.0
Aug 10, 2015

Eavesdropping on the echoes of the village's former residents is worthwhile, but the overarching mystery leaves a pretentious aftertaste

Read full review

EGM
Top Critic
7.5 / 10.0
Aug 10, 2015

Like The Chinese Room's previous work, Everybody's Gone to the Rapture will no doubt prove an acquired taste, but the game is bolstered by strong, character-driven writing and a desire to experiment with boundaries no other developer, indie or established, is willing to engage.

Read full review

7.5 / 10.0
Aug 10, 2015

Everybody's Gone to the Rapture feels trapped by its medium, forced into one of a handful of approved genres because that's what is expected of videogames. The Chinese Room knows how to create vibrant worlds, and fills Rapture's with a number of believable characters. If they trusted fully in these characters and their lives, or the audience's willingness to be fascinated by them without a sci-fi hook, Rapture would have been stronger for it. Anybody interested in games as a storytelling medium should play it, even if its light is reined back in right on the verge of transcendence.

Read full review

7 / 10
Aug 10, 2015

Fans of slower-paced story games will enjoy it, but others may very well lose their patience.

Read full review

Aug 10, 2015

As with Dear Esther before it, it offers up an admirable and atmospheric experience that simply isn't all that much fun to play.

Read full review

Aug 10, 2015

An exceptional story, told via one of the most vivid game worlds around.

Read full review

9 / 10.0
Aug 10, 2015

An unforgettable experience, Rapture deserves to be played by anyone with a fondness for stories.

Read full review