PC Gamer's Reviews
A well-executed but thoroughly unambitious extension of Borderlands 2. Low-grav jumping adds a new dimension to combat.
Adorable, amusing, colorful and well-animated, but the combat is too simplistic and repetitive to remain interesting throughout the game.
Ryse: Son of Rome's combat and incredible graphics are entertaining, but it's too narrow and repetitive, even for a short game.
The game the Alien series has always deserved. A deep, fun stealth game set in an evocatively realised sci-fi world.
Should have been a great, massive RTS in the tradition of Total Annihilation and Supreme Commander, but crippled by technical issues.
It's familiar, but Crown of the Ivory King is still another gorgeous five-hour helping of Dark Souls 2. Cherish it—it's your last.
The tech specs are demanding, but this is the Middle-Earth game to rule them all.
A tense and spooky stroll through a gorgeous world, some fun supernatural detective work, and an efficient script with sparse dialogue.
Defense Grid 2 isn't just another tower defense game, it's the best tower defense game.
Strong, handsome and, at times, fantastic, but FIFA 15 still never quite feels like football.
Buttressed effectively but the foundations need work.
An excellent RPG despite its glitches, with combat and writing as good as its predecessors'
Hack 'n' Slash starts as a clever game about game design, but ends up feeling like homework.
Once more with feeling: this is a fine if familiar base game with great creative tools.
A fun throwback to the feel of Dark Souls, but easier than we'd hoped.
The killing-lots-of-zombies genre is overcrowded, but Dead Rising 3 is one of the best, with a lovable dedication to fun, and some of the most inventive, hilarious weapons on PC.
A much-needed and fun refresher for Blizzard's card battler, although the next card expansion will need to be more sizeable.
A one-of-a-kind glimpse into the world of anthropomorphic-animal Japanese otome, Hatoful Boyfriend is surprisingly entertaining.
A beautiful and difficult action-RPG that rewards risk-taking—the complex magic system makes up for the bits that just aren't worth playing over and over.
Shadowgate isn't just retro, it's retrograde, and the visual update really isn't as impressive as it first appears.