PC Gamer's Reviews
A hard campaign (if you play on the hardest mode) and breakneck multiplayer are a good time, if often infuriating.
I love the new snowy setting, and there are some fun moments here, but ultimately Valley of the Yetis plays it too safe.
A great looking game, but its beauty is only skin deep.
Get a cardboard box, paint it silver, sit in it and pretend you're Kirk. There, we just saved you some cash.
Challenging and gorgeous, Ori is a classic platforming genre modernized and done strikingly well. Use a controller and save often.
Restrictive design decisions sap the energy from a series that revels in it, and technical issues deal the killing blow.
A handful of flaws, but this fun and addictive city-builder still climbs high.
The imperative to cash in on Black Flag is transparent, but as it turns out a location swap works wonders for igniting the hooded pirate in you again.
LA Cops has some cool ideas, but the frustratingly shoddy execution works completely at odds with the experience the game is trying to create.
A so-so start to this new series. The multiple character stuff is interesting, but weak shooting and bland environments let it down.
A solid, if thin puzzle game, with not quite as much to say as it thinks it has.
Beautiful and creative, but controls and design issues often drag it from challenging to frustrating.
There's a lot to parse, but understanding the nuances of Frozen Cortex reveals a deep strategic experience that stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Frozen Synapse.
A fun, unconventional RPG with interesting new ideas that aren't entirely overshadowed by its repetitive nature and stale combat.
A refreshingly asymmetrical FPS with terrific competitive depth, but the thrill of the hunt eventually begins to wane.
A barbarous twist on Rome II, with a handful of fixes.
Wonderful writing resting on top of infirm foundations. Almost a classic, Sunless Sea falls a few leagues short of its final destination.
Life is Strange elegantly meshes time-travelling with nostalgia-riddled teen drama, producing a sympathetic debut.
Phallic imagery and sore wrists don't stop this from being uniquely charming. Definitely worth a few quid and a few hours of your time.
Gravity Ghost hits the notes of big-budget platformers on a smaller scale; its story fumbles along the way, but it's short and sweet.