PC Gamer's Reviews
Kalimba is a beautiful, cheerful platformer that finds a neat middle ground between reflex-oriented running and taxing puzzle solving.
A habit-forming FPS for its strategic possibilities and tactical depth, but the lack of matchmaking is especially worrisome.
Engrossing tension between empowerment and disempowerment, greed and fear, across an eminently replayable system.
A massive, challenging retro-flavoured shooter that takes the Metroid formula and runs with it. Old school, but with a modern edge.
A beautifully designed, tough, and cheerful roguelike that rewards perseverance with a singular feeling of finesse.
Sledgehammer's second swing at a DLC pack is a modest hit, but lapsed Advanced Warfare fans may return to find that few others have.
A great combat system is restrained by thoughtless multiplayer mode design.
MachineGames are still masters of first-person violence, but this return to Castle Wolfenstein doesn't give them anything new to work with.
Beautiful, bold and varied. Slightly Mad are uncompromising in their simulation.
A capable attempt to recapture the magic of WWE, let down by the decision not to update any single element of the console versions.
A perfect blend of science and slapstick, and a robust and compelling sandbox of possibility. Simply outstanding.
Both land and space combat lack punch, but there's a fun if predictable 4X game waiting underneath.
The disappointing second half lets it down, but even at best, Broken Age is far from the genre's greats.
A stripped down stealth offering that reinvigorates Assassin's Creed by putting attention back on the sneaky stuff.
Fine fighter with an enjoyably daft story, marred by wobbly port to PC.
A sandbox of extraordinary scope created with a masterful attention to detail. A patchy campaign doesn't spoil this wonderful, evocative city.
Some issues keep it from being a stand-alone great, but fans longing for a reboot of Dungeon Keeper could do a lot worse than this clever, enjoyable dungeon manager.
More game than you might expect, but still best played for an audience.
Gunfighting can become a key-mashing hassle, but otherwise it's a very enjoyable western adventure.
One singular great idea is the foundation for a smart and occasionally thrilling action puzzler.