PC Gamer (US Edition)

PRINCE OF PERSIA

“To say it holds up visually is an understatement”

By the late 2000s, the Prince of Persia series was already on its way out. 2008’s entry, simply titled Prince of Persia, wasn’t quite the last gasp, but it was an attempt at forging a real future for the series—a reboot that took big swings in an attempt to update the formula.

Though well received critically at launch, it doesn’t hold much of a place in the heart of your average fan—but I’ve always had a soft spot for it. That fondness has only grown as modern videogaming has gradually dumbed down traversal. Sure, still lets you climb any building you like, but all you’re doing is pointing in a direction and holding down a button. The series was all about embracing the fun of leaping, swinging, focused most strongly on that core identity.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from PC Gamer (US Edition)

PC Gamer (US Edition)1 min read
Better In Beige
Noctua is ditching white fans. It’s instead choosing to focus on its next-gen 140mm fans currently nine years in the making. The company says it doesn’t know if white will ever be back on the roadmap. No biggie, its beige and brown option is already
PC Gamer (US Edition)1 min read
Matchmaking
The first step in pairing your Pals is to construct a Breeding Farm, which you can research once you reach level 19. Now you need a cake. Research and build a Cooking Pot, a Mill, and a Wheat Plantation to make flour and bake it. The last step is dec
PC Gamer (US Edition)3 min read
Rainbow Six Siege
Rainbow, the crack team of military operators, has a long and storied history defending the world from evil in Tom Clancy’s universe, but now Rainbow Six Siege is shaking things up by throwing one of their nemeses to the playable roster with the rele

Related Books & Audiobooks