Eurogamer
HomepageEurogamer's Reviews
Part of the team behind Sang-Froid are back with a spiritual sequel powered by some truly dazzling thinking.
Nintendo's second-ever Peach game finally realises the character is destined for smart level design and center stage.
Team Ninja borrows the open-world familiarity and historical tourism of Assassin's Creed while adapting its own breed of hardcore action for the mainstream.
A huge improvement over the original, and a captivating journey from beginning to end.
Great ideas and a storied history are mired in mediocre combat and a disappointingly unpolished delivery.
Lurking behind a dated exterior is a limited but sophisticated RPG with a unique setting and some memorable new ideas.
An ingenious combo-driven challenge that's speedy and fun.
In the latest from the team behind The Making of Karateka, a true genius gets an interactive museum for the ages
Vanillaware's beautiful art brings to life a staggeringly deep strategy RPG where building units is just as fun as orchestrating battles.
Drag and drop with a blessedly empty head in this total charmer.
Fight, albeit gently, for nature in this playful exploration game.
Poker goes into the blender and emerges in fine form.
Dark Forces emerges from Nightdive's bacta tank refreshed and ready for action, combining classic FPS mayhem with thrilling espionage-themed missions.
KillPixel's shooter demonstrates breathtaking ambition in its 3D level design, but that can come at the cost of pacing and fun.
Rebirth is a playful take on an emo classic that's bloated but full of character in a bid to justify its own existence.
A versatile build system allows for experiments with deep skill trees and unusual crafting mechanics - but after the initial excitement of creating those builds, momentum fades.
Ubisoft's long-in-the-works pirate adventure boasts a beautiful world and bombastic ship-to-ship combat, but it sinks amid boring busywork and tedious traversal.
A punishing, exhasperating slog, or an off-beat love story between driver and car, human and the Zone? Pacific Drive is both and then some.
If Counter-Strike is so good, why did it take 24 years to make Counter-Strike 2?
Don't Nod drops the melodrama for a poignantly performed story about grief and injustice, where the difficult choices tug at your heart and principles.