PC Gamer's Reviews
A beautiful game to look at, and wonderfully polished, but a thimble-deep RPG.
You can't just chuck players in a maze with a ghost and tell them to be scared. Unfortunately this is exactly what Daylight does.
An inventive puzzle game that's too short and easy to recommend—worthwhile only for the novelty of its concept
Deus Ex: The Fall belongs on your phone, not on your monitor. This is a woeful port with few redeeming features.
More accessible, challenging, and rewarding than its predecessor, this is the Dark Souls sequel PC gamers deserve.
An entertaining and efficient strategy game that improves on its predecessor—just not all that much.
Fusion's thrill isn't in leaping a yawning chasm as a jet screams below, but in simply clearing an overhanging ledge.
A few well-designed systems struggle to overcome lifeless presentation. Capable, but ultimately hard to recommend.
Smite makes the MOBA more approachable with smart tweaks to the formula and action RPG-inspired combat.
Cloudbuilt's platforming-as-time-trial-racing premise puts Sonic to shame, but its visual design detracts rather than supports it.
A war worth sinking your teeth into, on both its magical fronts.
A great comeback from episode two, A Crooked Mile amplifies the drama—though sometimes in the wrong ways—and confronts Bigby with hard choices and proper detective work.
An exceptional collection of puzzles bound by narrative which gets a little ahead of itself.
The worst gaming goat since that one in Broken Sword. This is a dumb, limited novelty game that's not worth the asking price.
It starts promising and gets better in the final act, but the bulk of Betrayer's journey is let down by inconsistent quality, repeat enemies, and investigative drudgery.
The story is lacking, but great environments, a new class, and more freedom—partially from the free patch—make for a better Diablo III.
A single-screen platform brawler that's about as good as the genre has ever been—in versus or wave-survival mode.
Like the best of Vlambeer's cannon, a simple concept executed beautifully. Limited enemy and level design, though.
Rambling plot aside, Burial at Sea, Episode 2 is an entertaining stealth-lite shooter with a likeable lead.
The most exciting multiplayer shooter in recent years, held back from greatness by its questionable staying power.