PC Gamer's Reviews
A miserable blend of flawed game mechanics that's a giant leap backwards from its predecessor.
Great in places, but never quite lives up to its potential. A competent sequel let down by inconsistency.
An exciting, kinetic single-screen multiplayer with excellent level design, but little to reward the solo player.
A nice change of pace for city-builders, but it loses momentum once the immediate urgency of survival goes away.
Loadout's gun customization and well executed twists on shooter staples make it a free-to-play game that doesn't feel like a compromise.
X misses the spot. The occasional bit of spectacle can't save this boring, broken and charmless space simulation.
Neither a good LEGO game nor tribute to the movie—at best, The LEGO Movie Videogame is enough fun to be called a functioning promotional product.
Stylish, inventive and easily one of the funniest games in years. Jazzpunk just wants to make you laugh. Don't worry, it will.
A great world and an interesting story, but this short second entry lacks the tense decision-making of the first.
A merciless and thoughtfully-designed online strategy game whose clever systems enable a unique and troubling experience.
Strike Vector's aerial combat is brilliant and beautiful, but it needs to be put into a package that does it justice.
Starts out funny, but quickly becomes frustrating. A wonderfully weird and original concept that falls flat like its jelly-limbed hero.
There are deeper strategy games, but few where you'll feel quite so invested in the outcome. Recommended.
Retro and proud, understanding why these games were fun even if they are in the past.
Sometimes stripped-down and stealthy, but mostly basic and boring, Liberation can't play in the big leagues.
A brilliant marriage of mechanics, level design and music that will be played and talked about for years to come.
A stylish, elegant brawler with an absurd sense of humour. More of this sort of thing on PC, please.
A great start for an adventure proud to have graduated from one of gaming's finest old schools.
"All That Remains" sets the stage for some great character development for Clementine, but there's not much payoff in this 90 minute episode.
Slapstick dismemberment is fun for a while, but Chivalry: Deadliest Warrior has neither the depth nor the polish to stay in the fight for long.