PC Gamer's Reviews
The most exciting multiplayer shooter in recent years, held back from greatness by its questionable staying power.
Infuriatingly difficult, but perfectly constructed. Ikaruga is the PC's best bullet-hell shooter.
Stylish, succinct and spiritual, Year Walk coins its own genre: the fright of passage.
A fun, polished, handcrafted RPG attached to a genuinely funny 15-hour-long South Park episode.
The Walking Dead's signature moral dilemmas are more nuanced than ever in a plot-heavy second episode.
Strider is a liberating, free-form action platformer studded with frustrating callbacks to an arcade era better left behind.
Technical shortcomings aside, Dragonfall's story rocks; a well-spent $15 for any RPG fan.
Masochistic stat-chasers will find much to enjoy, but Blackguards' varied combat is no substitute for a fully-formed RPG.
Resident Evil 4 is still a masterful shooter nine years later. Occasional slowdown caused by the locked 60 fps framerate hampers an otherwise great port.
A miserable blend of flawed game mechanics that's a giant leap backwards from its predecessor.
Great in places, but never quite lives up to its potential. A competent sequel let down by inconsistency.
An exciting, kinetic single-screen multiplayer with excellent level design, but little to reward the solo player.
A nice change of pace for city-builders, but it loses momentum once the immediate urgency of survival goes away.
Loadout's gun customization and well executed twists on shooter staples make it a free-to-play game that doesn't feel like a compromise.
X misses the spot. The occasional bit of spectacle can't save this boring, broken and charmless space simulation.
Neither a good LEGO game nor tribute to the movie—at best, The LEGO Movie Videogame is enough fun to be called a functioning promotional product.
Stylish, inventive and easily one of the funniest games in years. Jazzpunk just wants to make you laugh. Don't worry, it will.
A great world and an interesting story, but this short second entry lacks the tense decision-making of the first.
A merciless and thoughtfully-designed online strategy game whose clever systems enable a unique and troubling experience.
Strike Vector's aerial combat is brilliant and beautiful, but it needs to be put into a package that does it justice.