Eurogamer
HomepageEurogamer's Reviews
Beautiful, strange and sometimes a bit fiddly, Tokyo 42 offers a dazzling toybox to explore.
Beautiful but bug-riddled, Impact Winter isn't the game it could be yet.
Pared-back and wonderfully focused, this is a welcome blast of Burnout magic.
Tequila Works conjures a powerful spell from seemingly familiar elements.
Street Fighter 2 on Switch is a disappointing release made worse by the rip-off price.
This ruminative travel game is beautiful, poised, and a little predictable.
A revival of a 1992 Famicom game that never made it out of Japan, there's more to Echoes than a mere history lesson.
A solid Soulslike that stops a few steps short of greatness.
NetherRealm's latest is content complete.
PlayStation VR gets some much-needed support from Sony, but unfortunately Farpoint is a hollow novelty.
Llamasoft's latest is one of its best.
An ornate and clever if slightly under-cooked System Shock successor, which makes the most of a truly magnificent space station setting.
NBA Jam is revived in this spiritual successor, though not everything's quite as you remember it...
A gleefully gory throwback to 90s shooters wrapped in a rogue-like shell, Strafe is let down by uneven pacing and underwhelming guns.
The designer behind Harvest Moon returns with a game that frustrates as much as it fascinates.
A glorious ride down a futuristic California that never was.
A forgotten arcade treat gets a stylish updating.
Like Police Quest meets Papers, Please on a grim day.
Dawn of War finally returns with a fascinating, if imperfect, twist on the modern RTS.
A wobbly first-person horror whose moments of splendid unease are spoiled by clunky stealth, casual misogyny and warmed-over scares.