Eurogamer
HomepageEurogamer's Reviews
A woeful continuation of the Blood Dragon universe that splices Trials' brilliant handling with some torturously bad subgames.
A tribute to and evolution of Keiji Infaune's Mega Man, Mighty No. 9's moments of brilliance are tempered by its preposterous challenge.
Insomniac's Oculus debut blends great art, effective stealth design and VR's powers of immersion for wonderfully unsettling results.
The definitive version of one of the best and most overlooked fighting games of recent years.
Another rewarding glimpse inside the mind of London's greatest detective that's a little too old-fashioned and clumsy to shine.
DICE's reboot of a flawed modern classic fixes old problems while introducing new ones all of its own.
An accomplished follow-up to Triple Deluxe that is energetic and tactile enough to compensate for a handful of rehashed ideas.
Pared back and wonderfully focused, Dangerous Golf brings the spirit of Burnout indoors.
Platinum Games and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles might be a dream pairing, but a co-op focus makes for a game that's strangely compromised.
Blizzard's take on the first-person shooter sees a generosity of character accompanied by beautifully deep mechanics.
Blood and Wine is a fitting end to an exceptional video game.
Gareth Noyce's revival of the British isometric puzzle game offers a deep and amiable dungeon filled with eccentric wonder.
With the most exciting unit roster yet, Creative Assembly's latest is a godly blend of franchises.
Vast, gorgeous (and confusingly delivered), Fire Emblem Fates sees Intelligent Systems at the very top of its game.
Vast, gorgeous (and confusingly delivered), Fire Emblem Fates sees Intelligent Systems at the very top of its game.
Homefront: The Revolution boasts solid gameplay and impressive level design, but tonally it's a disaster.
Doom's superb campaign makes up for underwhelming multiplayer in id Software's remarkable comeback.
Heavy Spectrum's affectionate, idiosyncratic reboot summons the spirit of the original Shadow of the Beast, as well as some of its faults.
Raiden 5 is a peculiar, scrappy yet refreshing diversion from the genre norm of bullet hell.
Stellaris is the Paradox grand strategy game you need to play.