Metro GameCentral
HomepageMetro GameCentral's Reviews
An excellent remaster of an unappreciated classic from the PC's golden age, whose unique mix of genres seems more novel than ever.
At only 30 minutes long and with little replay value, this is not for everyone, but its unique emotional journey is an experience that stays with you.
An almost perfectly formed strategy game, that hides near infinite variety and depth beneath its deceptively simple presentation.
The flawed original is already showing its age, but this poor quality Switch port is Payday 2 at its very worst.
One of the most impressive PlayStation VR games so far, in terms of both its technical achievements and the sheer joy of playing it.
Not the Metal Gear fans will be used to in terms of either quality or action. But despite a few interesting highlights, it's just too boring to get very angry about.
A milestone in fast action VR games, which solves most of the problems with motion sickness while also being an excellent first person racer.
An unexpectedly brave attempt to once again rewrite the rules on Pac-Man, resulting in another near-classic arcade experience.
A well-crafted remaster but this ancient real-time strategy has little to offer modern gamers, especially when the sequel is already readily available.
Shallow mechanics hide a game that is much more simplistic than it first appears, but this is still a passingly entertaining take on a 3D Metroidvania.
The original SNES classic deserves better than this overpriced and undercooked remake, which fails to recreate the original's '90s charm.
It won't be for everyone, for various reasons, but if nothing else Kingdom Come proves that a role-playing game doesn't have to rely on fantasy to keep you interested.
Dynasty Warriors finally gets the overhaul it's long been waiting for… and while it addresses a few old problems it creates just as many new ones.
A fantastic sequel and one of the greatest action games ever made, and now available on a format that people actually own.
A fantastic sequel and one of the greatest action games ever made, and now available on a format that people actually own.
A superbly crafted 2D adventure that is a near perfect blend of new and old influences, in terms of both gameplay and the stunning visuals and music.
A very worthwhile expansion of the venerable strategy game, whose new features seem a natural, and surprisingly realistic, extension of the original game.
It definitely looks the part, and the striking is excellent, but stodgy controls and a weak ground game makes this far from the ultimate MMA game.
A hugely impressive achievement in interactive storytelling, that tackles difficult subjects head-on but still manages to be life-affirming and relatable.
The Final Fantasy crossover gimmick almost feels like a distraction in what remains a uniquely innovative, but also frustratingly flawed, fighting game.