Daily Pick

Click and compare - it's in your hands:

Multi-platforms contain a sliding comparison video. Full list of games within the Quick Links section.

Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe cover
Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe took the idea of a friendly sports match, threw it out of an airlock, and replaced it with metal armour and flying elbows.
Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe
1990 • Amiga • Atari ST • Commodore 64
Pixel8Games 83% Users
Enjoy a clean break
Jimmy White's Whirlwind Snooker cover
Jimmy White's Whirlwind Snooker (1991) swaggered onto the 16-bit scene like a pub-hero with a brand-new cue - loud, quick, and convinced every pot was on.
Jimmy White's Whirlwind Snooker
1991 • Amiga • Atari ST • Mega Drive +1 more
Pixel8Games 84% Users
Right on cue
Descent cover
Descent (1995) took a normal corridor shooter, spun it in every direction, then asked you not to be sick.
Descent
1995 • PC
Pixel8Games 90% Users
Six degrees of panic
Blood cover
Blood (1997) gleefully dragged the shooter genre into a blood-soaked carnival of horror, humour, and absolute chaos.
Blood
1997 • PC
Pixel8Games 91% Users
Horror with attitude
Marble Madness cover
Marble Madness (1984) looked cute until the timer started screaming and your marble began sliding like it hated you.
Marble Madness
1984 • Amiga • Amstrad • Arcade +6 more
Pixel8Games 74% Users
Don't blink!
Get Dexter cover
Get Dexter (aka Crafton & Xunk) dropped you into a glossy isometric sci-fi maze where an android and his tiny sidekick had to blag, dodge and gadget their way to an all-important code.
Get Dexter
1986 • Amstrad
Pixel8Games 82% Users
Crack the code, survive
OutRun cover
OutRun wasn't about winning races, it was about vibes.
OutRun
1986 • Amiga • Amstrad • Arcade +4 more
Pixel8Games 88% Users 100%
Choose your route. Chase the horizon.
Rolling Thunder cover
Rolling Thunder (1986) dropped players into a stylish spy thriller where trench coats were sharp, enemies were ruthless, and bullets were strictly rationed.
Rolling Thunder
1986 • Amiga • Amstrad • Arcade +2 more
Pixel8Games 83% Users
Cool under fire
Sorcery cover
Sorcery (1984) flung you across up to 40 flip-screen fantasy scenes as a last-ditch wizard, trying to rescue your kidnapped mates before the timer and your energy bar both had a tantrum.
Sorcery
1984 • Amstrad • Commodore 64 • MSX
Pixel8Games 81% Users
It's a kind of magic
Gryzor (aka Contra) cover
Gryzor (1987) strapped a machine gun to your thumbs and dared you to run right, shoot everything, and still look cool doing it.
Gryzor (aka Contra)
1987 • Amstrad • Arcade • Commodore 64 +1 more
Pixel8Games 83% Users
Run. Gun. Regret.
Maniac Mansion cover
Maniac Mansion (1987) invited you to pick a trio of teenagers and trespass into the Edison household, where every room hid a gag, a trap, or a way to accidentally doom your friends.
Maniac Mansion
1987 • Amiga • Apple II • Atari ST +3 more
Pixel8Games 79% Users
Break in, think
Rise of the Triad cover
Rise of the Triad (1994/95) took the Wolfenstein-style corridor shooter, chugged a can of soda, then started doing backflips.
Rise of the Triad
1994 • PC
Pixel8Games 86% Users
Ludicrous gibs!
Raid Over Moscow cover
Raid Over Moscow (1984) served Cold War panic as an arcade sampler platter: launch the interceptor, dodge defences, blow the silos, then head for the Kremlin like you'd lost a bet.
Raid Over Moscow
1984 • Amstrad • Apple II • Atari 8-bit +2 more
Pixel8Games 80% Users
The empire strikes back
Kick Off 2 cover
Kick Off 2 cheerfully ignored the idea of "fun for everyone" and instead demanded absolute mastery or total humiliation.
Kick Off 2
1990 • Amiga
Pixel8Games 78% Users
There's only one Dino Dini!
Ghostbusters cover
Ghostbusters (1984) dumped you into a bouncy, cash-hungry loop of buying gear, cruising the city, and praying you earned enough to keep the business afloat.
Ghostbusters
1984 • Amstrad • Apple II • Atari 8-bit +6 more
Pixel8Games 76% Users
Busting makes you feel good
Metal Gear Solid cover
Metal Gear Solid (1998) smuggled blockbuster drama into your PS1 memory card, then told you to stop shooting and start sneaking.
Metal Gear Solid
1998 • PS1
Pixel8Games 92% Users
Stealth with swagger
More games
+19 more reviewed
Go to Reviews

Want the full list? Hit Reviews for search facility, plus Newest, A-Z, Top Rated, and Platform filters.

Welcome

Retro reviews, no fluff

Pixel8Games is a nostalgia-first review site for classic systems. No waffle - just sharp context, honest verdicts, and video that shows how the game really plays.

One score across all platforms - weighted to the best version, which loads by default. Filter by a system and that version loads instead. Prefer another platform? Switch systems in the video overlay and make your case.

About