PC Gamer's Reviews
The resource management is deep, but the city itself never quite feels like a city.
Lacking the sharpness needed by both shooters and comedy, High on Life is a low point in the gaming calendar.
Dragonflight isn't the most thrilling expansion in the MMO's lineage, but it's a fresh start, which is a rare thing for a 20-year-old videogame to get.
An enticing premise held back by uneven pacing and glaring technical issues.
Some well-judged bold calls in both mechanics and visual direction elevate a familiar arcade racer above NFS's previous monotony.
An excellent remake, prequel, and game in its own right-Crisis Core has it all.
Kynseed is gorgeous, fun, and surprisingly impactful. Just don't rush through the prologue.
Though Warhammer 40K: Darktide needs more time to develop, its core gameplay is the best Fatshark has ever created.
A worthy revision of the legendary settlement sim. Slightly less impenetrable, just as engrossing.
Gory and moody, The Callisto Protocol doesn't mess with the survival horror formula, instead embracing all its beats and clichés to tell a grim sci-fi tale that drips with menace.
Who knew Sid Meier's protégés had a secret, and completely brilliant, Persona game in them?
Messy, overcomplicated and slow to start, but fun once it picks up speed.
The heights of Warzone 2’s combat and stunning map design are held down by a rocky launch rife with issues.
Performance and pacing problems mar an otherwise novel and comprehensive survival city builder.
Tense, haunting and beautiful. Inventory shenanigans aside, one of the best survival horror games yet.
Evil West delivers on its big dumb action game premise, for better and worse.
A totally immersive management experience creaking under the pressure of annual release culture. It needs extra time.
An excellent evolution of its predecessor that, while carrying over some of its weaknesses, has further strengthened its high points.
Goat Simulator 3 neither excels at gif-able joke physics nor at being a structured singleplayer platformer.
Somerville never hits its stride, thanks to flat direction and frustrating mechanics.