
Part-chaotic retro shooter, part-stylish cartoon noir, Mouse P.I. for Hire goes beyond its stellar artistry to land an invigorating hard-boiled romp.


Part-chaotic retro shooter, part-stylish cartoon noir, Mouse P.I. for Hire goes beyond its stellar artistry to land an invigorating hard-boiled romp.

Resident Evil Requiem marks the series' 30th anniversary with a stellar return that's both a masterful, suffocating horror and a nostalgic victory lap.

It's impossible to talk about Reanimal without talking about Little Nightmares. Developer Tarsier's first game since de…

Is there a sound more beautiful than the ding of a squirt well-squirted and a job well done? A baby's laugh, you might …

Supermassive plays it safe, meaning too many familiar frustrations. But impressive artistry – and a mid-game uptick – still makes for a compelling adventure.

Jenny Jiao Hsia's dazzling, semi-autobiographical tale of teenage life finds wit and warmth in its WarioWare weirdness, even as it deals with difficult themes.

Acclaimed point-and-click studio Wadjet Eye's gently paced, time-travelling genre-hopper blends elegant puzzling and in…

A quietly radical evolution of the Monster Hunter formula, Monster Hunter Wilds is the most exhilarating and refined Monster Hunter yet,

It might not have quite the same wow factor second time around, but Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 builds on its astonishing predecessor with intelligence.

Planet Coaster 2's flexible creation tools are as compulsive as ever, but the fun butts up against an exhausting UI and uninspired management gameplay.

Phoenix Springs doesn't so much start as awaken, adrift in a shimmering void of static to an only slightly discordant c…

Eurogamer's review of Tactical Breach Wizards, an imaginative, witty, and wonderously generous turn-based tactics gem.

Eurogamer's review of Thank Goodness You're Here! Developer Coal Supper's relentlessly inventive absurdist comedy is a masterclass in gag-telling.

Eurogamer's review of Still Wakes the Deep, a beautiful work of atmosphere and tension, all that can be shattered by its strictly linear trappings.

Eurogamer's review of Indika, where bleak realism meets absurdist fairytale in a stylish, surreal, and astonishingly surefooted exploration of faith.