Eurogamer
HomepageEurogamer's Reviews
Far: Changing Tides' story is a little longer and its puzzles more refined than its predecessor, while its world is as beautiful as ever.
Another beautiful technical achievement, Horizon Forbidden West is held back by clunky characters and new features that lack purpose.
Warhammer 3 is Creative Assembly's most maximalist, chaotic, and arguably best game to date. But it'll ask a lot of you in return.
An elegant martial arts meditation on temporality and self-possession, set in a loving but touristy idea of China.
A zen puzzler that lingers restless in the mind.
A thrilling leap forward for a magical skating series.
Techland's vast blockbuster buckles under its own ambition and lacks in innovation, but makes up for it with outstanding parkour and combat.
An excellent, deceptively unshowy blend of platformer and roguelike.
Inspired as much by Pok'mon Go as it is Breath of the Wild, Pok'mon Legends: Arceus is flimsy and compulsive - and exhilaratingly new.
Rainbow Six Extraction's tactical PvE is good, punchy fun with a squad, and has a couple of nice little twists - but that's about it.
Dotemu delivers an exquisite extension of Data East's 1994 masterpiece.
Drinkbox's latest is an ARPG that has real fun with the classes.
A microsurgical blending of genres results in a lovely balance of precision and chaos.
A pop-up picture book with a lovely feel - but busywork intrudes too often.
A commentary on games and players and a compulsive grind to boot.
KT Racing celebrates 50 years of WRC with a generous, enjoyable package - even if some old problems persist.
Radiohead's near-genreless music is paired with a remarkable first-person walkthrough that's just a touch light on interactivity.
History repeats itself with a joyful, educational flourish in Age of Empires 4, a game of sweet simplicity and bottomless depth.
A work of powerful ugliness that skilfully refuses to find the fun.
Rewild an alien world in this elegant and thoughtful game.