The best games of năm 2016 ran the gamut from taut, well-told tales to wide-open possibility spaces. If there’s any justice, the year will be remembered as one in which triple-A exceeded itself with games that weren’t so much sequels as reinventions, & in which indies had no trouble at all keeping up.

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To grapple with và get the most out of everything here you’ll need khổng lồ bring tactical nous, a big heart, and your little grey cells. And don’t forget to lớn wear your fun-garees. You know. For all the fun.


Forza Horizon 3

*

Forza Horizon 3 is the third in a series of attempts to humanise Turn 10’s excellent, if cold, driving simulators, và the first to successfully complete the windy và treacherous route from Xbox lớn personal computers.

Set in an alternate-world nước Australia, in which everyone and their mums is obsessed with motorsports, Forza Horizon 3’s open world exists khổng lồ satisfy you. As in Pokémon’s Kanlớn, every citizen in the country pours their energies into lớn one shared passion, becoming either opponent or cheerleader of your efforts to lớn become the leading racecar driver & part-time festival organiser down under.

It can be patronising, showering you with currency & swooning before your coolness và ability, but none of that matters. The tiệc nhỏ atmosphere is infectious, và the engine beneath is quite simply the finest available in the genre. Drift sideways through the outbachồng. Drive sầu lớn the beach and persize stunt jumps through an elephant’s graveyard of cargo ships. Build a festival site that takes up 25% of Byron Bay. Just pichồng a road và goooo.

Titanfall 2

*

What a lovely twist in the tail end of a delightful year for games. Titanfall 2 is not only a good sequel to a multiplayer game deserted too soon by its community – it’s also a fantastic single-player shooter. The kind you used to lớn tell people about in 2004 và 2007 – a Half-Life 2 or a BioShoông chồng.

As the campaign progresses, with hulking metal companion BT at your side, developers Respawn fire & forget: tossing away brilliant ideas as if they were empty clips, before reaching for another. All the while, Titanfall 2 offers a first-class showcase in visual và audio feedbaông xã – nothing underwhelms.

How could we have forgotten, in the year of Modern Warfare Remastered, that this team of former Infinity Ward staffers were capable of such great feats in single-player FPS design? Forgive sầu us, Zampella & co., for our forgetfulness.

Planet Coaster

*

You’d be hard-pushed to lớn find a game that exudes as much happiness, joy, and enthusiasm as Planet Coaster does with every guest’s beaming face. Yes, on the surface, it’s all about creating và managing a theme park, but the compelling element is how even donkey work lượt thích raising the price of slushies by a couple of pennies feeds bachồng lớn improving the general happiness of your guests. Everything you vị in Planet Coaster is in the name of making others happy. It’s a feedbaông chồng loop that has its roots in Rollercoaster Tycoon, but one that Frontier Developments have perfected & built upon in Planet Coaster.

Creation is key to lớn that feedback loop: it’s one thing to lớn kiến thiết a park & please your guests, while creating a park that makes you happy và proud is another thing entirely. Thankfully, Planet Coaster boasts some of the most flexible and freeing creation tools outside of a dev kit. There are hundreds of objects & shapes – all fully customisable, of course – that can be bolted onlớn boring toilet blocks in order khổng lồ theme them to lớn your tastes. Just look at all the mad & beautiful Planet Coaster creations the community have sầu put together since the game’s launch if you’re still not sold on its unique.

Civilization VI

*

In the year 2217, when your ‘mouse hand’ is a bionic replacement designed specifically for PC gaming, there will still be a new Civ – overseen by Sid Meier from his life-support throne, designed by a plucky new designer straight from MIT. It’ll be reassuringly familiar but shrewdly different.

So it is with Civ VI. Although it can’t currently compete with the bundled editions of its predecessors for sheer wealth of content, it’s the perfect celebration of the defining 4X on its 25th anniversary. Music, palette, pacing: all conspire lớn make you fall for the series all over again, providing a warmth where Civ V was sometimes too stern.

This entry takes a new branch in the Civ series tech tree, too, planting bold new mechanics & laying svào foundations for diplomacy, religion, war, và espionage which will surely be built up inkhổng lồ proud cities in the inevitable expansions.

Deus Ex: Mankind Divided

*

It was in between stacking the fourth và fifth dumpster in an impossible staircase up to a Prague apartment window that we realised – at no point have Eidos Montreal forgotten Deus Ex’s roots. For all its modern shooter trappings, the series has lost none of its essential magic in silly simulation và player problem-solving.

It perhaps hasn’t gained quite enough in Mankind Divided, Montreal’s second Deus Ex sequel to date – certainly not in overall length. But the studio maintained their focus on improvisational combat and avoidance while venerating player ownership above all else, allowing parts of their knotty plot of prejudice & class struggle to lớn slip inlớn the background if we so desired.

Speaking of which: although it might điện thoại tư vấn itself a shooter, Mankind Divided does quests better than practically any mainstream RPG outside of The Witcher. And nowhere else in the game industry will you see the khung of giả gmail writing carried so far. To top it off,Mankind Divided’s PC port isn’t too shabby either.

Want more? Read our Deus Ex: Mankind DividedReviews.

Inside

*

Playdead’s long-awaited Limbo follow-up begins with a boy in the woods, minus a backstory, and with no other option but to stumble towards the right-hvà side of the screen. This overfamiliar fake-out soon gives way lớn a game with its own mysteries, however – a game so accomplished that these Danish indies couldn’t possibly have made it on their first time out.

Like its predecessor, Inside offers body horror, và the prospect of pulling and pushing boxes about so that you can clamber to lớn out-of-reach areas. But it’s also about control, and brings uneasy new mechanics lớn match its new themes.

There’s a more nuanced aesthetic, too – while Limbo is unmistakeable in its gloom, Inside’s gently stylised approach manages a remarkable & terrifying verisimilitude. When a masked man chases down your young charge & drowns hyên ổn in a puddle, the fear hits you somewhere central. In the space between its impeccably choreographed animation và sound thiết kế, Inside starts to lớn feel horribly, horribly real.

Doom

*

With Quake Champions on the horizon và this exceptional shooter in the rear-view mirror, id are tearing down the highway at the front of the paông xã again after a decade in neutral. Where Doom 3 spun the horror of boss khủng closets off into a realm of dark rooms và sudden scares, new Doom takes a different tack: embracing the forward aggression of the original and coating everything in gibs rather than shadows.

Brilliantly, the gore feeds into the game – ultraviolent glory kills are not only a visual và aural reward in Doom for getting up cthua trận & impersonal, but serve a tactical purpose, offering health pickups and a valuable few seconds lớn decide on your next attaông xã or weapon switch. That rhythmic flow soon becomes second nature thanks khổng lồ level kiến thiết that funnels you between murderous, vertiginous arenas. A masterclass in FPS kiến thiết that never feels anything less than contemporary.

Want more? Read our Doomđánh giá.

Overwatch

*

Blending elements from Team Fortress 2, MOBAs, và Blizzard’s own extended universe, Overwatchcemented itself as the multiplayer PC game of năm 2016 – not even the likes of Battlefield and COD could topple it.

It’s the sort of game that would once have sầu been called ‘class-based’ but now goes under the ‘character shooter’ moniker, offering a focused selection of modes that riff on TF2’s payload maps & capture point objectives. Really, though, it’s the interplay between Overwatch’s heroes that make it special. It really is a feat of balance on Blizzard’s part – you think Bastion’s OPed until you realise it takes 200% damage from behind when it’s in turret configuration. You suspect Genji is too good until you watch someone’s Play of the trò chơi & realise, nope, that player is just incredibly skilled. You think Zenyatta’s useless và then he spends an entire round killing you.

Best of all: in typical Blizzard fashion, support and development continues in earnest.

Want more? Read our OverwatchReview.

Dark Souls III

*

Never really a series about difficulty but, rather, camaraderie – banding struggling solo players together via scrawled messages và occasional co-op –Dark Souls is incredibly self-assured in its third iteration. An entire industry might have sầu failed to follow them, but FromSoftware now know exactly how to lớn go about their strange, knotted màn chơi kiến thiết – littering the sequel’s hard road with diversions, shortcuts, secrets, and optional bosses. They’ve sầu named the result Lothric: a mostly-dead world that recalls the 19th-century German fantasy of The Nutcracker & exists in perpetual twilight.

After a break to hone his skills on Bloodborne, director Hidetaka Miyazaki returns with a masterclass. There are odd moments where encounters feel unfair, và you’ll fall to lớn the occasional cheap, untelegraphed boss attachồng. But at its hollowed heart, Dark Souls III on PC is a near-perfect ramble over peaks & troughs of frustration, building to lớn a godlượt thích crescenbởi vì that feels like nothing else in games because you’ve sầu earned every step.

Want more? Read our Dark Souls IIIreview.

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The Banner Saga 2

*

The Banner Saga games are uniquely gruelling in an RPG genre where the numbers tkết thúc only khổng lồ go up. Here your warriors get weaker, not stronger, as they’re chipped away at in turn-based combat, swinging weakly at the encroaching Dredge. And as your exhausted caravan trundles on, tying events together, you’ll inevitably fail to lớn save every desperate soldier và their family.

Even victories in The Banner Saga 2 can feel pyrrhic, coming at a great cost. The cruelty is leavened only by a gorgeously-animated art style which evokes Disney’s Beauty and the Beast but also has a stark nobility of its own.

Fittingly-named studio Stoic have sầu addressed complaints about samey-ness this time around, introducing obstacles, special objectives, and centaur-ish enemies with horrifying, cheek-crushing hooves lớn the battle. The emotional engagement the series started with might have been lessened by an overlarge cast of characters, but The Banner Saga 2 can’t be bettered for bleak tactics & management.

Want more? Read our The Banner Saga 2Review.

The Division

*

It’s impossible to lớn know how much The Division has changed since the E3 trailer that first lit up our imaginations lượt thích a Thủ đô New York Christmas. But it’s become a stark, breathtaking co-op shooter that diverges from the Ubisoft open-world formula by embracing Diablo-style progression systems.

Identically blaông chồng kevlar vests don’t make for the most compelling loot, but tying DPS lớn Clancy-style tactics works better than you’d think – rewarding suppression, flanking, and good use of cover with more favourable numbers.

You play as a federal sleeper agent shooting looters. You’ll hear your colleagues dismiss your targets as mindless or “animals,” và the tone can err towards dehumanising rather than empathising. But the world building is better than in any other Ubi game. There’s an early mission that has you navigating the makeshift morgue the city’s metro has become. The centrepiece of another is a burning department store Christmas tree. The Division on PC is by turns bleak và beautiful.

Want more? Read our The DivisionReviews.

Hitman

*

Maybe it’s too much to ask that Io Interactive sầu get everything right at once. They managed khổng lồ confuse us all when describing the lademo Hitmanwith talk of episodes and staggered development. But, at the same time, the studio hit on the same inspired thiết kế principles that carried Blood Money, oft-remembered as Agent 47’s finest outing.

EveryHitman location releasedhas been a great big puzzlebox filled with creative sầu murder solutions. The Parisian mansion, for instance, is occupied by AI characters who react khổng lồ the ripples you create in their lives, as well as the lives of their fellow NPCs.

Your options for assassination aren’t so emergent, but they are colourfully scripted: poisoned sushi taken to your mark by a clueless waiter; a press camera packed with plastic explosives. Hitman is a celebration of experimentation.

Want khổng lồ hear more before you scan the barcode? Read our Hitmannhận xét.

Rise of the Tomb Raider

*

We may no longer see the vast graphical leaps of old – the great strides forward of Doom và Quake – but Rise of the Tomb Raider was far và away the most beautiful game you could play on your PC in năm 2016. Crystal Dynamics built an explorative sầu showcase around some astounding set-pieces: strange Soviet installations and longboats encased vertically in ice.

Beneath the veneer there’s an adventure that builds on the successes of the 2013 reboot, returning Lara not only lớn unflinching third-person murder, but also the tombs of the title – multi-stage crypt conundrums that put Uncharted’s tired pillar-shifting lớn shame. Rise of the Tomb Raider is a sequel driven by the same curiosity that never quite seems to kill Lara but does for everyone else around her.

Want lớn delve deeper? Here’s our Rise of the Tomb Raiderđánh giá.

XCOM 2

*

Less a straight-up sequel than a guerilla resistance story told with familiar mechanics, XCOM 2 is far more ambitious a game than the iteration Firaxis could have sầu been forgiven for turning in. On the ground, it’s all about the squeeze: the struggle to lớn scout a procedurally-generated map & nab your objective sầu in the face of an inflexible turn timer, the threat of overwhelming enemy reinforcements, và the necessity of reaching a distant evac point – even if that means sprinting through urban corridors thick with overwatchers.

On the global màn chơi, it’s all about turning back the hands of time – or, rather, that of the progress of the alien Avatar project that can jeopardise your entire campaign. This time the aliens are playing the game along with you, and it’s a wonderfully frightening, consistently surprising prospect. It’ll keep on surprising, too, thanks to XCOM 2’s mods.

Want to lớn know your enemy? Read our XCOM 2reviews.

Homeworld: Deserts of Kharak

*

What on Earth, or some less habitable orb, does a Homeworld game look lượt thích when it’s not in space? Surely the classic RTS series is all about the vast gulf between planets, the vulnerability & beauty of combat in the void, rather than the planets themselves?

As it turns out, Homeworld can be about both. The graceful dance of its units, ducking bachồng and swooping forward in elegant strategic symbiosis, is transposed successfully khổng lồ the desert here. Relic refugees Blackbird Interactive have sầu even preserved that vulnerability, too, in the ramshackle movement of physics-enabled dune convoys. After a little time on Kharak, you’ll wonder if the sandy surface actually makes a better battlefield than space: almost as endless và overwhelming, but scattered with obstacles và terrain that can alter your tactics.

Enjoy a dust-up? Here’s a Homeworld: Deserts of KharakReview.

The Witness

*

Without wishing to lớn sound lượt thích your dad on a family walking holiday, there’s a certain irony in whisking the player away to lớn a breathtaking whimsipunk island before sticking their head in screens the whole time. On paper, The Witness doesn’t necessarily sound lượt thích a great time at all – boasting more mazes than a motorway service station puzzle book, but asking you to lớn sit upright in front of your PC for tens of hours khổng lồ tackle them.

In the event, however, Jon Blow’s seven-year project turns out lớn be the purest evocation yet of the feeling that made Braid essential. The Witness provides you with a framework to lớn build your understanding, stretching your brain sideways and making you feel brilliant in the cerebral sense of the word. And thanks to that isl&, you’re freer than ever before to lớn wander off and stimulate your synapses somewhere else rather than bang your head against a particularly troublesome panel. We’ve sầu already solved one puzzle for you: whether or not Jon Blow is drinking enough water.

Still puzzled? Read a Witnessreviews.

Oxenfree

*

If Far Cry 3 didn’t teach you that teen beach parties off the beaten path can end spectacularly badly, hormonal horror story Oxenkhông tính tiền certainly will. Taking its cues from the supernatural cinema of the ‘80s, it combines post-Telltale conversation with synth pop and stunning backdrops drawn by Disney alumni.

You’re Alex, the wayward kidult responsible for pulling new stepbrother Jonas inkhổng lồ a big, scary mess. Well done. But you’re also the one with the radio that allows you to commune with the dead and manipulate the world around you – uncovering isl& events across decades và lifetimes. Voice talent from The Wolf Ahy vọng Us và The Walking Dead awaits, as well as decisions that can affect the outcome and – more importantly, for a teen – Alex’s relationships.

Darkest Dungeon

*

A cruel, cartoon roguelike which asks a question of your adventuring party: who are you becoming? Usually they’re becoming corpses, but along the way they can piông xã up a catalogue of characterful traits và ailments – halting disease, crippling fear, gnawing paranoia và, lest we forget, the after-effects of actual gnawing.

It’s less about the grasp you belatedly gain over the turn-based RPG systems in Darkest Dungeon, & more about the well of anecdotes you’ll acquire in the meantime. The masochists you’ll thua thảm to packs of wild dogs; the jesters who’ll succumb to lớn the wrong sort of mushrooms; the bounty hunters you’ll see starve in dank passageways because they forgot their shovel. If you’re inkhổng lồ permadeath, procedural dungeons, & emergent stories, this might just be your bag.

Want to know more? Read ourDarkest Dungeonreviews.

That Dragon, Cancer

*

One of PC gaming’s rare attempts at autobiography, That Dragon, Cancer comprises a series of disarming vignettes in which you play witness khổng lồ the diagnosis, struggle, & eventual loss of its lead developers’ toddler son. Playing as family members, bystanders and – on one occasion – a duông chồng bobbing gently in a nearby pond, you participate lớn varying degrees in Ryan và Amy Green’s memories.

Interaction is dosed out only in small amounts, often khổng lồ convey a particular feeling. What you can control is the pacing, indulging in moments of uplift và racing through some of the pain if you so choose. Despite the terrible proximity of its creators to lớn its source material, the game is never anything less than a light touch – an honest tài khoản that becomes an exercise in empathy for its players. It’s just a shame That Dragon, Cancer sales haven’t reflected its quality and nuance.