Eurogamer
Reviews
594 reviewsA cluttered control screen can be a pain, but sync up a controller and Apex Legends Mobile is the real deal.
Supermassive's latest is one of the team's very best - but for one smart, but disastrously implemented mechanic.
Listen. There's a card trick you like. You look it up in a book, make sense of the weird diagrams, and get it all semi-…
Old school shooters have always been where you'll find video games at their most direct, and the genre's side-scrolling…
Like a fleet of Allied landing craft storming the beaches of Normandy, Sniper Elite 5 has blown me away. I spent most o…
Shoot-shoot-dodge-repeat. Soundfall is a game all about rhythm. Music blasts in your ears, the environment bops and dan…
Ska Studios' sequel to Salt and Sanctuary offers a wonderful suite of combat customisation, but some shallow storytelling holds it back.
Gary Chang lives in a tiny apartment - 344 square feet - in Hong Kong. And Gary Chang is an architectural designer, so …
Occasionally turning subtext into text, Citizen Sleeper's real magic is found in the boundless warmth of its characters - and the humanity of its own design.
I once got bullied out of going to see the film A Knight's Tale by the cashier at the cinema. He took one look at me an…
A brutal but graceful and comprehensible mix of ideas from Warhammer, XCOM and Gears Tactics.
Oh, I remember this. Move the sofa. Push back the chairs. And then every game begins with something that takes me back …
Cellar Door adds more depth and plenty of new ways to enjoy its charming roguelike formula.
A free, surprisingly good-feeling Sonic game can't go amiss with fans in need of tiding over, but some underwhelming progression holds it back.
A deceptively goofy asymmetrical tactics game that feels as grand as any monster movie.
eFootball 1.0.0 arrives with more substance and structure, but the good ideas are still buried too deep.
Despite some visual delights in its cybernoir, pixel-art vision of Singapore, Chinatown Detective Agency's let down by lightweight mechanics and bugs.
The PSVR gets its swan song with Moss: Book 2, a charming follow-up to one of the platform's best.
A serviceable restoration of one of the best and strangest games in Squaresoft's back catalogue.
The Old West has always been weird, hasn't it? A bloody daydream of plunder and desolation, heroism and nihilism, reinc…