Everybody's Golf Reviews
A vibrant interpretation of golf that expands on the series' distinguished lineage without compromising, or distracting from, its strengths.
The game makes you replay a paltry number of out-of-the-box courses and its modes lack features, resulting in a sidestep for the series.
Sony's long-running golf series hits a birdie in its feature-rich PlayStation 4 debut.
Clap Hanz's effort to evolve Everybody's Golf is a successful way of thinking outside of the box.
It may not be the purist's choice, but for pure enjoyment it cannot be beaten. Everybody's Golf is everything I wanted from the return of the series.
A good Golf Game that is very accesible to everyone and very beautiful. Its flaw it's certain lack of variety and contents.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
In some ways Everybody's Golf has been well worth the wait. This is still the same gentle and appealing brand of arcade golf that fans have come to know and love, and it's easy to get caught up in the sheer fun of it all. However, once you venture online you'll discover that the game is currently deeply unbalanced, with micro-transactions and mobile-esque grinding sapping any sense of competition from proceedings, while asking players to reach for their wallets in order to gain an advantage. In a game that's supposed to be all about the golfing fun, Sony have categorically found a way to put you firmly in the rough.
Everybody's Golf is limited in scope, but makes up for it with pure charm.
A more than correct golf game. It preserves the franchise's effective and confortable gameplay. The new additions may like or dislike you depending of the type of player that you are. The focus is on social gaming now, that's for sure.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
Not every single aspect of Everybody's Golf hits the mark, but so, so much of it does. It gets the most important parts right, and I'm hopeful we'll see some quality-of-life updates and advanced control options before long to help close the gap. Clap Hanz has dreamed up a wonderfully warmhearted game, one I encourage every would-be golfer to consider picking up.
A good golf game that takes its attitude to the esthetic and functional customization has his mantra.
Review in Italian | Read full review
The most arcade and funny golf game is back with a new videogame that remembers of the best games of the saga. Besides, it features many improvements and great online modes.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
Expect well-architected courses, a small selection of meaningfully varying clubs and balls, and a distinct visual presentation that includes lots of goofy but oddly agreeable quirks, like characters running down the fairway after their balls.
Everybody's Golf is a solid series entry despite minor issues in the graphics and online server departments.
With a low barrier to entry and a high skill ceiling, charming design, and reasons to play for a long time, Everybody's Golf really is golf for everybody. What? You were expecting a hole-in-one pun?
Everybody's Golf is joyful, fun and packed of amazing things to do. Clap Hanz reinvented its take on golf with a gripping online mode and a very functional ability progression system without losing the "easy to learn, hard to master" attitude of the series. The game lacks on the technical side, but it's fun to play and is really meant for everyone, so if you don't hate to spend time on the green, Everybody's Golf is really worth playing.
Review in Italian | Read full review
Everybody's Golf was exactly what I was looking for in a relaxing, yet fun game. It has the makings of a great arcade golf game and some pretty nice longevity with the online mode.
Players are able to customize their characters appearance with unlockable parts from body shape, to clothing, to the animation style they use during the game.
Everybody's Golf reaches the green at eagle pace and then proceeds to duff the green. Don't get us wrong, this is still a highly enjoyable arcade golf game with some brilliantly original ideas, but there are some bizarre design errors which seem to weirdly imbalance the game. Pair that with an unreasonable progression system and you're left with a title that needlessly undoes a lot of its own hard work.