Every IGN 10 of 2022


2022 has given us plenty of phenomenal games, movies, TV, and tech to enjoy. So many, in fact, that IGN gave out a whopping 15 10-out-of-10 review scores. Here’s everything we deemed worthy of being called a masterpiece this year.

Elden Ring

FromSoftware has a long list of beloved action RPGs under its belt but Elden Ring is the first IGN has given a 10. It’s a challenging open world full of horrors and delight and an evolution of what made the likes of Dark Souls and Bloodborne so well-loved on a grand scale rarely seen before in a game. It begs to be endlessly explored as you hunt for its many secrets and the next expertly designed boss. Our review said it “can easily be held amongst the best open-world games we’ve ever played. Like The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild before it, Elden Ring is one that we’ll be looking back on as a game that moved a genre forward.”

God of War Ragnarok

God of War Ragnarok is every inch the sequel its 2018 predecessor deserved, leading to it joining an elite list of series including GTA, Metal Gear Solid, and The Last of Us with back-to-back games that have received an IGN 10. An enthralling blend of action and adventure, it thrills with its crunching combat and twisting tale, building on what came before in bigger and better ways and cementing Kratos in the pantheon of all-time great video game characters. We praised its “impeccable writing, pitch-perfect performances, and knockout action”, claiming it to be “a complete work of art from top to bottom”.

Dwarf Fortress

Dwarf Fortress is a masterpiece over 20 years in the making, a complex yet highly rewarding management game given new life thanks to a welcome glow-up. The already cult classic – which is about maintaining a colony of dwarves and protecting them from gods, monsters, and natural disasters – has never looked or played better. We described it as “a genre-defining achievement” that “shows how incredible video games can be when a developer has a precise goal and valiantly strives to achieve it, even if the effort takes decades”.

Pentiment

Pentiment is unlike anything Obsidian has made before and indeed, it’s not a lot like any other game in general. It’s a detective RPG masquerading as historical tourism and its unique art style is undoubtedly eye-catching as you make your way through late medieval Bavaria questioning its townfolk on all things murder and theology. Our review called it “an engrossing 15-to-20-hour adventure game” with “a clever detective story in which straight answers are hard to come by”. Pentiment is undoubtedly an acquired taste, but one well worth sampling.

The Batman

The Batman is a very different kind of detective story and is one of two movies to get a 10 out of 10 this year. Matt Reeves’ rain-soaked Gotham played host to Robert Pattinson’s Bruce Wayne on the trail of an illusive riddle-loving serial killer in perhaps the darkest on-screen version of Batman we’ve seen yet. It’s a tremendous collision of comic book panels and neo-noir cinema, and delivers a story that gets deep under the Dark Knight’s skin. We deemed it a masterpiece, describing it as “a gripping, gorgeous, and, at times, genuinely scary psychological crime thriller that gives Bruce Wayne the grounded detective story he deserves”.

Everything Everywhere All At Once

Our review called Everything Everywhere All at Once “a complex film that encompasses a variety of subjects, but it does justice to each of them with a carefully written script, marvelous performances, and a healthy dose of bizarre humor to counter its bleak story”. Bizarre is definitely the watchword here as the directing duo Daniels take us on a multiversal journey through all things weird and wonderful. What makes it so special is the way it manages to balance those oddities with a thoroughly heartfelt story told through the eyes of Michelle Yeoh’s Evelyn in a true powerhouse performance. It’s unlike anything else you’ll watch this year, and as good as any other as well.

Andor – Episode 6 “The Eye” & Episode 12 “Rix Road”