PC Gamer's Reviews
The game barely qualifies as playable given its myriad of technical issues, but even when it is working as intended, you'll wish that it wasn't.
Atmospheric, imaginative, and enjoyably unpredictable-this is one of the year's best horror games.
Ghostrunner deserved a sequel; specifically, a sequel better than this one.
The city builder sequel is packed with big improvements but a fair share of disappointments.
A lean roguelite that never feels like it's wasting your time, even if it's got some rough edges.
Some of the best boss fights in the genre's recent history, riddled with difficulty spikes in all the wrong places.
Compelling, but not quite there yet. Needs two seasons to grow the beard.
Total War: Pharaoh's battles may be limited by history, but Creative Assembly compensates for this with a complex, thematic, and highly dynamic campaign.
Assassin's Creed Mirage isn't the triumphant return to glory that I hoped it'd be, but it's a good first stab.
As mechanically polished as driving sims have ever been on PC. Stately and familiar, but finely crafted.
A puzzle adventure of rare ingenuity that thrives on its tactility as much as its design.
No, really-they've actually changed things this year, and the football feels better.
An over-ambitious and technically flawed tactics game that can't live up to its more accomplished influences.
Bigger, better, more refined than its predecessor. Perhaps standing out a little less now, but with vast potential.
Payday 3 could be one of the slickest co-op shooters around, but it's mired by a grindy progression system and its always-online nature. It needs some time to cook before it's worth digging in.
Between muddled gameplay and conflicted writing, Mineko's Night Market can't decide on an identity to fully embrace.
A solid 4X that fails to capture the spirit of its colourful setting.
There's the skeleton of a good Mortal Kombat here, but it's lacking in meat. Low on personality and half-baked in its attempt to reboot the story, it feels fated to be remembered as the least interesting of the modern MK games.
Phantom Liberty doesn't reinvent Cyberpunk 2077, but it is CD Projekt firing on all cylinders to tell a great RPG story.
Forza mimicry aside, the improved handling and visuals, along with Grand Race mode, are a revelation.