PC Gamer's Reviews
Capy's tough-love approach and well-worn survival systems makes it harder to appreciate Below's singular look and feel.
Parkitect offers a well constructed attraction, even if the ride is overly familiar.
A obsessively tuned, finely crafted shooter that more than recreates the speed and pure joy of '90s classics.
Building the best decks will cost you, but Artifact is an intricate and rewarding card game.
Wonderfully weird and inventive. Katamari Damacy isn't perfect, but it holds its own impressively well 14 years on.
Mutant Year Zero is a tense, absorbing and atmospheric new member of the XCOM family.
Still delivers the series' sandbox mayhem, but is underserved by some pretty dated systems.
Imaginative, beautiful, and utterly strange, but you'll need to really love the story to endure its idiosyncratic combat.
A diet XCOM in a fascinating techno-cultist skin.
Punchy combat and a pretty setting can't hide Darksiders 3's flaws.
A beautifully crafted but ultimately repetitive world, and a disappointment when it comes to options on PC.
Riddled with bugs and bizarre mechanics, Underworld Ascendant is a bafflingly poor debut from OtherSide Entertainment.
The Walking Dead gets the zombies and the theme just right, but everything else is a mess.
Despite changes such as fortifications, more physical character movement, and an increased focus on squads, it still scratches that distinctive FPS itch that Battlefield always has.
Essentially more of its predecessor but with a more consistent quality of levels. Which is fine: its predecessor was great.
A mediocre detective game with predictable stealth and a surreal story that runs out of steam near the end.
Football Manager returns with a kitbag full of new and overhauled features. It's the best at what it does, and FM 19 is the best it's ever been.
Mostly delightful and sometimes punishing, Bad North is a fun alternative to more complex strategy games.
I listened to Wandersong's soundtrack while writing this review, and I've been happily jiggling my leg throughout.
An often spectacular space shooter that lacks the variety and depth to justify serious investment.