PC Gamer's Reviews
Rime is a middling puzzle platformer with some genuine narrative depth, but the latter doesn't quite justify the former.
A great port of an entertainingly subversive cover shooter. It's short, but the core loop never gets old.
An interesting story with some beautiful scenery, but let down by half-hearted puzzling and some derivative story beats.
Gorgeous grand strategy with atmosphere, depth and replayability—but it needs more time to reach its potential.
A bright, fun and surprisingly substantial racing experience that does interesting things with Forza Horizon 3's core design.
The Surge isn't the same as Dark Souls but comparison's inevitable. Like that cyborg whose torso I severed, it struggles to stand on its own.
A satisfying, moreish take on the roguelike formula, and one that's most likely to appeal to genre naysayers.
Half enjoyable adventure, half clunky mess, Beat Cop is a talented rookie in need of a long talk with HR.
It's let down by lacklustre combat and some annoying enemy design, but Prey is still a compelling, beautiful immersive sim.
Strafe skillfully recaptures the look and experience of a full-tilt twitch 1990s shooter while faltering at building upon its potential.
Bold and enjoyable at times, unplayable at others, Man o' War: Corsair is too leaky to wholeheartedly recommend.
Dawn of War 3 has overly dominant elites, and a merely serviceable campaign, but it captures the power of mass battles well.
Touching, sad, and brilliant; a story worth forgiving the limited interactivity to experience.
Funny, philosophical, and deeply, deeply weird, there's nothing else quite like Everything on PC.
A beautiful but short-lived expedition that left me wanting more of its best ideas.
Some solid puzzles can't rescue what is an otherwise terrible adventure game.
Stealth and pursuit haven't changed much in Outlast 2, but it excels as a beautiful, brutal journey through extreme spiritual anxieties.
A cinematic, high-octane, but short-lived adventure, lovingly remastered for a new generation.
An okay platformer but a deeply imaginative horror game, Little Nightmares is worth playing for its array of disturbing imagery.
Smart without being overbearing, Zero Escape: The Nonary Games continues to set the bar for its genre.