32 best PC games: the must-play titles you can’t afford to miss


Introduction

Best PC games

The PC is either making a comeback or never went away in the first place, depending on who you ask.

Whichever camp you’re in, a deluge of triple-A titles, virtual reality and (whisper it) decent console ports make picking the PC over the Xbox One or PS4 a no-brainer. Thanks to the popularity of Valve’s Steam platform, finding and downloading the best PC games is easier than ever before.

Whether you’re a mouse-and-keyboard diehard who mutters “boom, headshot!” in their sleep, or a joypad-wielding adrenaline junkie, the PC has no shortage of blockbuster and indie titles to help you waste away the hours.

We’ve rounded up the best PC games out there today. If you don’t agree, let us know in the comments below..

PC games on our radar

System Shock 3

System Shock 3

There’s nothing quite like a sequel to a 90s classic to really get our juices flowing. Released in 1998, System Shock 2 was one of the defining survival horror games on the PC that decade. The main antagonist from that game, the psychopathic AI SHODAN, is returning for System Shock 3. Little else is known about the third game in the series, which is being developed by Otherside Entertainment, other than it could feature VR support. As if System Shock 2 wasn’t scary enough without it…

Release date: Possibly 2016

Torment: Tides of Numanera

Best PC Games

If Pillars of Eternity (which currently sits fourth in our list of Best PC Games) whet your appetite for old-school RPGs, Torment: Tides of Numenera looks set to continue the nostalgia-fest. The spiritual successor to Planescape Tournament (it’s being written by that game’s designer, Colin McComb), Tides broke the then-Kickstarter record for surpassing a million dollars in funding in just seven hours. Based on the pen-and-paper game Numenera, which is set a billion years in the future, expect Tides to be heavily story-driven and terrific to look at thanks to its living and breathing environments set in the Ninth World.

Expected: 2015

Best PC games

Cuphead

Few games are unique these days, but Studio MDHR’s charming run and gun title Cuphead just might be deserving of the label. Featuring a visual art style borrowed from 1930s Disney cartoons (think Mickey Mouse in Steamboat Willie), it’s a romantic blend of old and new-era entertainment. Adorable and even a bit disturbing due to its screen-filling bosses (most of which are drawn with deranged facial expressions), Cuphead has us thirsty for more.

Expected: 2016

DOOM

Bethesda’s upcoming DOOM reboot is taking id Software’s classic FPS back to its frenetic roots. Shown off at E3, early gameplay footage running on id Tech 6’s game engine was nothing short of gore-tactic. Enemies can be blown into chunks with the regular assortment of high-powered shotguns, rifles and laser-powered weapons, and the chainsaw has made a particularly grusome return.

Expected: 2016

Unreal Tournament

One of the most celebrated arena-shooters of all time, Unreal Tournament brushed Quake 3 aside to claim the online shooter crown back in 1999. It’s remained a firm favourite with FPS fans ever since, leading to a remake being announced in 2014. Developed in Epic Games’ Unreal Engine 4, Unreal Tournament brings back classic weapons including the Flak Canon, Pulse Rifle and Mini-Gun. The first high-resolution map, Outpost 23, looks nothing short of stunning and is sure to give UT die-hards m-m-m-m-monster thrills.

Expected: Out now (Pre-alpha), Final TBC

1. Cities: Skylines

Cities: Skylines

Cities: Skylines is SimCity updated for the modern era, proving a breath of fresh air for would-be mayors. Its core gameplay lets you dig deep into the various aspects of running a sprawling virtual city – from economics to macro and micro management and land planning. But Cities: Skylines really shines when it comes to mods, which allow you to create custom maps, assets and tools to share with other online players.

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2. Dragon Age: Inquisition

Dragon Age: Inquisition

Dragon Age: Inquisition places you in the heart of a huge, vibrant world on a far greater scale than its predecessors, and it does an excellent job of making you feel in command. Packing in a huge 90 hours (and the rest) of gameplay into its storyline, Inquisition’s smart dialogue, compelling plot, savvy progression system and massive sandbox world will have you engrossed for months on end. Think the Elder Scrolls games meets the Diablo franchise and you’re halfway there.

3. Hearthstone: Heroes of Warcraft

Hearthstone: Heroes of Warcraft

A card game from the makers of World of Warcraft, Hearthstone is easy to learn, but hard to master. Like Blizzard’s famous MMO, Hearthstone combines classes, characters and a bit of tactical luck when throwing you into battle against computerised or online opponents. Stick with it and you’ll be rewarded by its tactical, deep gameplay. Though available on iOS and Android, its low system requirements, excellent presentation and great sound effects mean it’s best experienced on the PC.

4. Pillars of Eternity

Pillars of Eternity

Pillars of Eternity is a sprawling RPG in the vein of Baldaur’s Gate or Icewind Dale that combines highly detailed technical combat with hundreds of hours of gameplay. It has refreshingly low system requirements on the PC but still looks incredible thanks to its simple but effective art style, which harks back to those aforementioned isometric fantasy RPGs of the 2000s. But it’s not all about nostalgia: Pillars of Eternity has enough interesting characters, baddies and clever writing to make it a modern classic of its own.

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5. Grand Theft Auto V

Grand Theft Auto V

Grand Theft Auto V is one of the most anticipated console ports to ever hit the PC. You probably didn’t need telling twice to head back into Los Santos’s hugely detailed and interactive world, but it’s ten times more fun with the PC’s richer graphics and smooth 60 frames per second gameplay. Once you’re done with its 31-hour storyline or had your fill blazing around the city causing chaos, an ever expanding list of GTA V mods – from fine tuning cars or throwing vehicles around with a Gravity Gun – are bound to keep you entertained for some time.

23. Heroes of the Storm

Heroes of the Storm

As inevitable as sandals in summer, Blizzard finally launched its first MOBA (Multiplayer Online Battle Arena) game in June. Featuring a ton of characters from Blizzard games such as Warcraft, World of Warcraft and Starcraft 2, Heroes of the Storm sees two teams of five attempt to destroy the other’s base. When not sounding out enemy units to destroy, its expansive maps give you room to take on secondary objectives such as finding skulls or unlocking special siege units to help your team.

Accessible to newcomers while packing plenty of depth, Heroes’ finely balanced gameplay mechanics, shorter matches (compared to League of Legends) and ability-based levelling system make it a refreshing alternative to established MOBA titles and a fine game in its own right.

24. Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain

Metal Gear Solid V

The new Metal Gear, which is likely Hideo Kojima’s final game in the series, is a hugely ambitious title. Its massive open world setting lets you tackle missions using stealth, but it won’t punish you for going in guns blazing – which is often the most tempting option.

Set nine years after the events of Ground Zeroes, The Phantom Pain’s story unravels through its main missions and more than 100 Side Ops tasks. The action is interspersed with gorgeous cutscenes, and while you sometimes have to decode annoying military-babble to understand what’s going on, TPP’s fast pacing and gorgeous Afghanistan settings never make the game feel like a chore.

25. SOMA

SOMA

A gripping horror game in the vein of Amnesia: The Dark Descent (it’s from the same developer), SOMA has its fair share of “NOPE!” moments. But it’s not really about jump scares; the game’s most compelling aspect is its philosophical story arc, which unravels as you encounter a series of confused robots. Suffering from existential stress, the decaying machines believe they are human.

The tension builds as you venture deeper into the underwater research facility that you wake up aboard, avoiding murderous creatures, solving clever puzzles and checking voice memos to unravel the mystery. Expertly weaving elements of survival and psychological Sci-Fi horror, SOMA is a little less action packed than Alien: Isolation but engages more of the old grey matter. If that’s what you’re looking for in a fright-fest, SOMA doesn’t disappoint.

26. Prison Architect

Prison Architect

if you think you’ve learnt a thing or two about prison life watching films like The Green Mile and The Shawshank Redemption over the years, cuff-em-up Prison Architect lets you put your knowledge to the test. Playing as wardens, you’re tasked with keeping prisoners in check, preventing riots from boiling over and foiling The Great Escape-style plots. And yes: it does involve sending men to the electric chair. Gnarly. Alternatively, a second mode called Escape lets you unleash your inner Bronson by hatching a plot to lead your fellow inmates to freedom. (Until you get arrested again, anyway.)

27. Warhammer: End Times – Vermintide

Warhammer: End times

Five heroes, many Skaven. That’s the basic premise of Warhammer: End Times – Vermintide, a hack-and-slash fest that plays – and feels – a lot like Valve’s Left 4 Dead series. With a deep focus on co-operative gameplay, Vermintide’s melee-focused combat, random loot, level-based progression system and humanoid rat enemies make for a refreshing alternative to gunning down endless hordes of zombies.

Although it’s fun attempting to talk tactics over voice chat with players online, Vermintide is often too chaotic to try anything other than bashing or shooting the nearest Skaven between the eyes — and that’s fine — from giant Ogre Rats to stealth Gutter Runners, there’s enough variation to keep things interesting. And if you do start to get get bored, unlike the Skaven, ratcheting up the difficulty makes sure Vermintide won’t get long in the tooth any time soon.

28. Fallout 4

Best PC games

It’s official: Fallout 4 has lived up to the hype. Despite feeling a little bit like Fallout 3 but with nicer graphics at times, its tighter shooting, in-depth crafting system and well-thought out story make it a wholly more enticing affair.

As the Sole Survivor (the first fully-voiced protagonist in the Fallout series) in Boston’s post-apocalypse wasteland, you’ll take on Feral Ghouls, Raiders, Syths and Bloodbugs and more with high-powered weaponry that includes the Fat Man mini nuke cannon and the fusion cell-powered Laser Musket.

PC gamers can take Fallout 4 to even greater highs through a growing number of mods. They range from the Enhanced Wasteland Preset, which makes the wasteland look more vibrant on beefy PCs, to the sensibly named Fallout 4 Configuration Tool, which makes the game run smoother on wimpier PCs.

29. Rainbow Six: Siege

Siege

If the Call of Duty series is the poison that dumbed down the FPS genre with its run-and-gun gameplay, then Rainbow Six: Siege is the antidote. Working as a team to out-wit the enemy, Siege plays out like a thinking man (or woman’s) Counter-Strike that doesn’t simply encourage cooperation if you want to win – it requires it.

When you’re not peering down your gun’s iron sights, you’ll be laying traps, scouting ahead using drones, strategising with your teammates and building walls that could keep a herd of demented bulls at bay. While Siege’s heavy reliance on tactical team-based gameplay can prove its biggest weakness if you’re hoisted into a server with a particularly uncooperative bunch, when it does click, it provides a level of satisfaction rarely found in online multiplayer games.

30. Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

“Console port” is no longer a dirty phrase thanks to efforts like Rise of the Tomb Raider, which gets the treatment it deserves on PC. Featuring stunning and varied locations, exciting combat and effective stealth mechanics, Lara’s epic outing often feels movie-like in its execution and scope.

Crystal Dynamics has kept the soul of the original games intact too – there’s pistols aplenty, amazing architecture and angry animals that would quite like to gobble you up – meaning you’ll never get bored once you’ve soaked up Siberia’s amazing architecture. If you’re into adventures, it’s easily one of the best PC games around.

31. Superhot

Superhot

Originally created as an entry to the 7 Day FPS Challenge, Superhot’s Polish developers were inspired by a top-down game called Time4Cat where time only moves when the player does. They took this concept one step further and turned it into a FPS. Falling somewhere between Portal and Max Payne, nifty reflexes, patience and an eye for puzzle solving is required.

The aim is to defeat a finite number of enemies by dodging bullets and returning a few yourself. The game is now available to buy and download on Steam, but you can head back to where it all began by playing the flash version of Superhot online for free. You’ll need the Unity Web Player plugin which is currently not supported by Chrome.

32. X-COM 2

X-Com 2

X-Com 2 is one addictive game, and we still can’t put it down. Following up from 2012’s XCOM: Enemy Unknown, which reimagined the 1994 cult classic UFO: Enemy Unknown, XCOM 2 has delivered everything we wanted in a sequel. Bigger, deeper, faster and even easier on the eyes, the turn-based tactics game takes place 20 years after its predecessor.

It pits you in control of the Avenger, a converted alien ship that serves as your mobile base of operations used to devise strategy and execute fight plans against otherworldly enemies. With a greater focus of stealth, more intelligent alien AI and deeper customization options, XCOM 2 is bound to end up one of our games of the year.

Source: techradar.com

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25 Comments
  1. Reply Seamus Jones April 11, 2016 at 1:04 pm

    Skyrim a console port? Wrong.
    Skyrim is a continuation of the Elder Scrolls, a series of games going back 20 odd years. It has always been designed for the PC platform, and ported to consoles from there.
    Console ports for the record are games which are released onto consoles first, then usually within a few weeks, released onto the PC with an upgraded graphics pack. None of the games you listed are console ports.

    I have no clue what your point about Hearthstone is. Sure you can play it on a phone, what's the issue?

    Project Cars is a racing game, Asseto Corsa a simulator. What you will find PC gamers do, is buy both, each for their own merits.

    Don't believe me, do some research.

  2. Reply Brandy Hauck April 11, 2016 at 7:41 pm

    I'd agree with 7 days to die, haven't played for a while though, hope they've fixed lighting issues (too many torches in your base and the game slowed to a crawl).

    I'd also agree on fallout, and x-com. I'd actually argue for spring to be in there personally (open source supreme commander type game, epic fun).

  3. Reply Sydnee Weissnat Jr. April 11, 2016 at 9:47 pm

    Both your moms are sad lists.

  4. Reply Prof. Clementina Bechtelar DDS April 12, 2016 at 2:00 am

    hahah you would think they could make something as simple as a 64bit exe thne ? i recall people asking for it in oblivion as well…

    and lets not forget a complete broken menu system the "high" res textures wasent relased same date as the PC game

    Asseto Corsa even if it might suprice you is also a racing game…

    And yes morrowind is pretty superior to skyrim…….not visual but everything else >.<

  5. Reply Zoila Robel April 12, 2016 at 2:01 am

    Project CARS simulates more things than Assetto Corsa. Water Temperature, Oil, Engine. Some things related to aero and some other things i don't even understand are not even simulated in Assetto.

    The FFB is definitely better in Assetto but that's not everything there is to a sim.

    So it's definitely a sim. It's more forgiving in terms of how inputs are handled.

    In my book ,the definitaiton of a sim is if it simulates real life. Project CARS simulates all things, both mechanical ,as well as regulations.

    I don't see why I shouldn't call it a sim?

  6. Reply Green Tremblay I April 12, 2016 at 5:19 am

    You're a sad list

  7. Reply Catalina Spinka April 12, 2016 at 5:21 am

    No Minesweeper? Sheesh.

  8. Reply Dedric Bernhard April 12, 2016 at 10:30 am

    Not one of the entire Bioshock series? Damn, theres something wrong here…

  9. Reply Prof. Chesley Harvey PhD April 12, 2016 at 1:37 pm

    No Battlefield 2?

  10. Reply Mrs. Maryam Schmidt PhD April 12, 2016 at 7:35 pm

    Suggest some alternatives then, smarta$$

  11. Reply Adonis Considine April 12, 2016 at 7:46 pm

    Having or not having a 64bit exe doesn't determine if something is a port or not. Given TES is regarded as one of the very best series of games ever made, even better than the GTA series which its beaten in many reviews, i reckon they know what they are doing.
    Which TES game you prefer is not relevant to the discussion, but for opinions sake, I'd vote Daggerfall > Skyrim > Morrowind > Obliv > Redspire > Arena >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>Not playing TES >>>>> TESO

  12. Reply Mr. Kelley Torphy April 12, 2016 at 10:42 pm

    All the released games are so fucking boring crap.

  13. Reply Mr. Willard Becker April 12, 2016 at 10:45 pm

    wow no arma 3 or rust what a shit list

  14. Reply Filiberto DuBuque DVM April 13, 2016 at 5:55 am

    More like Portal sees the benevolant GladOS give a portal gun to a fat girl who was abandonned by her parents who never loved her. This girl proceeds to use the gun to spitefully attack GladOS just because she wanted her to perform a few simple puzzles. Did I mention how fat she was?

  15. Reply Ms. Bria Schamberger I April 13, 2016 at 4:39 pm

    Then do yourself a favor and stop calling it a sim. If I'm very generous I'd label it as simcade, kina like Forza, GT and such games. why do people have to make up stuff for things, call it what it is and you won't see comments like this.

  16. Reply Dr. Mandy Spencer April 13, 2016 at 4:41 pm

    How quite ironic you state that, as I obviously meant Minecraft should be in the top 10. double standards

  17. Reply Michel Boehm April 14, 2016 at 12:39 am

    *wookiee

  18. Reply Mr. Quentin Mayer April 14, 2016 at 2:54 am

    Did I say that? Pull yourself together dude… I said pCars is far from a proper sim and not that there is no such thing as proper simulation.
    You should try reading the comment you're replying to, so YOU can save yourself some embarrasment. Cause you obviously don't know how to read. Or maybe you know how to read, but you just don't understand what you read.

  19. Reply Josh Hackett April 14, 2016 at 3:43 am

    Popular games since 07 is how I read it.

  20. Reply Prof. Maia Auer IV April 14, 2016 at 6:14 am

    NO MASS EFFECT, MAD

  21. Reply Lulu Treutel V April 14, 2016 at 11:58 am

    Witcher less-than-enthralling story? Are you high? Sure maybe the story isn't like in Planescape:Torment, but fuck me – storytelling level of this game is beyond reach of any other open world title.

  22. Reply Dr. Earnestine Yost April 14, 2016 at 12:50 pm

    And the new Superman is…..Jonah HIll

  23. Reply Hallie Bernier April 14, 2016 at 4:28 pm

    Congratulation you was able to list 23 trash games. You are obviously very competent.

  24. Reply Lea Kub April 14, 2016 at 7:09 pm

    Set in the future but based on the past… seems legit

  25. Reply Alek Jenkins April 14, 2016 at 10:01 pm

    But you aren't on the Nostromo in Isolation, you're looking for it…

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