PC Gamer's Reviews
A great, merciless speedrunning platformer and twitch shooter with a mediocre presentation.
An inspired take on survival, where you get to bring your own horror.
A whole new challenge for diehards, and a lot of content for your money.
Satisfying arcade skate-'em-up that's fun from the off, and promises many hours on the hard path to mastery.
After a promising start, Light's simplistic take on stealth quickly plateaus and then abruptly stops, falling well short of its potential.
A delightfully weird aesthetic is wasted on a fighting game-platformer hybrid with shallow combat and structural twists that failed to grab me.
Slow, technically flawed and dogged by premium microtransactions. A sorry take on a classic card game.
A promising concept but dismal execution on just about every level.
A robust puzzler whose colourful visuals can't mask a lack of personality.
A little obtuse in places, but otherwise this is the best new RPG in years. Demands your time and your brain, but it's worth it.
Shovel Knight lovingly recreates the simple pleasures of 8-bit platformers and improves on them with modern ideas that make every level different and worth playing.
Fun sniping and great mission design just barely eclipse bugs, exploitable AI, and other issues that would make a lesser game impossible to recommend.
The freshest shooter to sprout in recent memory, PvZ is shackled by asinine DRM.
Space Run is a fairly fun twist on tower defense, but it lacks much of the genre's interesting experimentation.
Visually stunning but mechanically lacklustre, Valiant Hearts gets in the way of its own storytelling.
No flashy new features or buzzwords, just magnificent racing stemming from a refinement of Grid 1's greatness.
A shot of adrenaline for the year-old game, these new armies bring the best parts of Company of Heroes into the upgraded Company of Heroes 2 world.
Charming, clever and funny, this is one of the best new platformers on the PC at the moment. Recommended.
With deep strategic systems, omnipresent dread, and clean turn-based combat, Xenonauts is a triumph of rebooted game design.
The previews looked fantastic, but the final release of Lifeless Planet fails to build that potential into a worthy game.