Metro GameCentral
HomepageMetro GameCentral's Reviews
A colourful new puzzle idea used to its full potential in terms of gameplay and, surprisingly, storytelling.
The comparisons to Portal are many, and obviously intentional, but this smart and ambitious first person puzzler is no mere clone.
A worthy follow-up to Limbo, that challenges in terms of both its fiendish puzzles and its harrowing storytelling.
A successful soft reboot for the venerable fighting game series, and a great jumping on point for those dissatisfied by Street Fighter V.
An impressively complex action role-player, where every problem has multiple solutions, but it's not always quite as smart as it thinks it is.
Some of the new features could’ve done with pruning, but Ubisoft’s willingness to nurture indie style experiments continues to bear fruit.
A stunning technical achievement and a mesmerisingly addictive one, even after you realise how simplistic and repetitive it really is.
Another disappointing port of one of the Wii’s best games, although still a clever and entertaining mix of Pikmin and The Settlers.
The visual look of the game is novel and fun, but underneath it is a shallow and only intermittently enjoyable dungeon crawler.
Still a little unpolished in places, but with its huge variety of locations and gameplay elements this already stands toe-to-toe with both Terraria and Minecraft.
A disappointingly direct copy of Journey that offers an incredible audio and visual treat, but lacks the deeper meaning of the original.
One of the best offline multiplayer games of the year, and proof that shouting at people sitting next to you is still one of gaming’s greatest pleasures.
A disappointing start to what should be a potential rich concept, with an overfamiliar storyline and bland presentation.
More than just a tech demo, but still far from a defining VR experience – especially given the plain visuals and unfocused story and gameplay.
One of the best hacking-themed video games ever, and a clever puzzler with some surprisingly successful storytelling elements.
What starts as a fine homage to Super Metroid and ‘70s style sci-fi ends as a disappointing waste of both story and gameplay potential.
Without virtual reality support to increase the novelty this this would-be walking sim proves a disappointingly bland experience.
The best Lemmings game since the Amiga days, except with flesh-eating zombies instead of mindless mammals.
An inspired mix of real science, sandbox gameplay, and space simulation – that is both a lot more entertaining and a lot more accessible than you'd expect.
A well-crafted homage to Chrono Trigger, which isn’t scared to add its own ideas – ensuring this is far more than just a nostalgic novelty.