PC Gamer's Reviews
Problematic in some areas, but overall a really good, thoughtful move towards better sex games.
A promising, assured start, and a welcome return to form for Telltale.
An unsatisfying, forced march through the source material.
An accomplished piece of fan service, but the excitement fades fast and performance problems spoil it for some.
A novel perspective on totalitarian surveillance. Orwell may not make you think, but it should keep you entertained.
If you want to make Total War: Warhammer harder, the Wood Elves are here to ruin your peace of mind.
Though much too easy, Dead Rising 4 is sandboxy zombie-killing adventure that recaptures the series' fun.
Steep’s freedom is exhilarating and it looks stunning, but clunky, imprecise controls tarnish the experience.
A great PC port and lovely open world don’t give depth to Watch Dogs 2’s shallow combat and stealth design.
Repetitive but fun, a hellish challenge or a relaxing, spectacular gore bath depending on how you approach it.
Hitman is back. Confident design and a willingness to experiment produces some of the best missions of 47's long career.
Better than RollerCoaster Tycoon World, but doesn't do much to innovate on the formula.
A rich, detailed world, tense stealth and frenetic action. Dishonored 2 has it all.
A beautiful adventure platformer with a cheerful pixel art veneer, but with very modern themes.
Repetitive combat and an abrupt ending spoil what is otherwise a remarkable feat of worldbuilding.
A beautiful action movie that punishes improvisation, with under-populated multiplayer that can’t compete with a nine-year-old game.
Hokkaido is a confident and experimental end to a great season.
It’s far from revolutionary, but it is a very well refined version of Football Manager that empowers the player by putting all the information you need at your fingertips.
Persistent bugs, a convoluted interface, and incompetent colonists hold back a great premise.
A brilliant singleplayer campaign married to inventive, skill-intensive multiplayer that calls back to FPS classics of old.