As of 15 April 2026, early-year review aggregation on Metacritic shows an unusually concentrated run of highly rated releases and re-releases tied to Capcom, led by Resident Evil Requiem and supported by Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection and the long-delayed Pragmata appearing in the site’s “Best Games This Year” top 10.
Across these titles, the headline story is not just high Metascores, but also volume and consistency—large critic sample sizes for flagship releases, strong “positive review” ratios on Metacritic’s breakdowns, and enough cross-platform coverage to show where performance and reception diverge by platform (especially where Switch 2 ports and PC tuning are discussed).
Pragmata Metacritic score and reviews (2026)
Metacritic lists Pragmata (PS5) with a Metascore of 86 (“Generally Favourable”) based on 91 critic reviews, with 97% positive, 3% mixed, and 0% negative reviews at the time of capture.
Metacritic’s “All Platforms” panel shows meaningful platform spread for Pragmata: Nintendo Switch 2 (89), PC (88), PlayStation 5 (86), and Xbox Series X (86), alongside platform-specific critic review counts (with PS5 carrying the largest set of critic reviews).
On the Metacritic “Best Games This Year” page (all platforms, current year), Pragmata appears in the top 10 as the #10 entry at 86 at the time of capture.
Resident Evil Requiem Metacritic score and critic consensus
Metacritic lists Resident Evil Requiem (PS5) with a Metascore of 89 (“Generally Favourable”) based on 133 critic reviews, with 97% positive, 3% mixed, and 0% negative critic reviews in its breakdown at the time of capture.
Metacritic also shows a very high user score of 9.4 (“Universal Acclaim”) based on 13,850 user ratings for the PS5 listing at the time of capture, indicating unusually positive user sentiment at scale (while remaining conceptually separate from the Metascore).
Platform-level critic reception for Resident Evil Requiem is even stronger in the “All Platforms” view: Xbox Series X (93), PC (92), Nintendo Switch 2 (90), and PlayStation 5 (89) with distinct critic review counts per platform version.
In Metacritic’s “Best Games This Year” (all platforms) list for 2026 so far, Resident Evil Requiem sits at #2 with 89 at the time of capture.
Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection Metacritic rating and highlights
Metacritic lists Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection (PS5) with a Metascore of 86 (“Generally Favourable”) based on 61 critic reviews, and a user score of 8.2 (“Generally Favourable”) based on 159 user ratings at the time of capture.
The critic split shown on Metacritic is heavily positive: 97% positive, 3% mixed, and 0% negative at the time of capture.
Platform performance in Metacritic’s “All Platforms” panel is uneven, with PC (87) the highest-scoring version, PS5/Xbox Series X at 86, and Nintendo Switch 2 (81) materially lower (and based on fewer critic reviews than PS5/PC).
On Metacritic’s “Best Games This Year” list (all platforms), the game appears as #9 with 86 at the time of capture.
Capcom 2026 game lineup ranked by Metacritic
Metacritic’s company page for Capcom lists several 2026 releases and Switch 2 re-releases with their platform Metascores and dates, including Resident Evil Requiem (multiple platforms), Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection (multiple platforms), Pragmata (multiple platforms), plus Switch 2 ports such as Resident Evil 7: biohazard – Gold Edition and Resident Evil Village Gold Edition, and the compilation Mega Man Star Force Legacy Collection.
A practical way to “rank” a publisher’s year-to-date lineup on Metacritic is to use the highest-scoring platform version available for each distinct title (since Metacritic publishes separate platform pages and scores). Under that approach, the top tier for Capcom-linked 2026 releases (as of 15 April 2026) is:
- Resident Evil Requiem — best platform score 93 (Xbox Series X), with PC close behind at 92.
- Pragmata — best platform score 89 (Nintendo Switch 2), with PC at 88.
- Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection — best platform score 87 (PC).
- Resident Evil 7: biohazard – Gold Edition (Switch 2) — Metascore 87 (Switch 2).
- Mega Man Star Force Legacy Collection — best platform score 80 (Nintendo Switch), with PS5 at 74 and PC at 78 shown in platform panels.
- Resident Evil Village Gold Edition (Switch 2) — Metascore 79 (Switch 2).
This ranking is sensitive to (a) whether later 2026 releases enter the dataset, and (b) whether future critic review volume shifts scores on any platform page (a normal feature of review aggregation).
2026 highest-rated games on Metacritic top 10 list
Metacritic’s “Best Games This Year” (all platforms, current year) top 10 at the time of capture includes the following titles and Metascores:
- Pokemon Pokopia — 94
- Resident Evil Requiem — 89
- Mewgenics — 88
- Resident Evil 7: biohazard – Gold Edition — 87
- Hermit and Pig — 87
- Cult of the Lamb: Woolhaven — 87
- Perfect Tides: Station to Station — 87
- Nioh 3 — 87
- Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection — 86
- Pragmata — 86
In that snapshot, three Capcom 2026 releases (Resident Evil Requiem, Monster Hunter Stories 3, Pragmata) appear in the top 10, and a major re-release (Resident Evil 7: biohazard – Gold Edition) also appears—an unusually dense showing for a single publisher early in the year.
Why Pragmata’s long development delays made its strong reviews surprising
Pragmata was first shown publicly during Sony’s PS5 reveal event in June 2020, framed as a new Capcom IP headed to PS5, Xbox Series X, and PC, setting expectations early in the console generation.
Capcom then publicly shifted the release window to 2023, with reporting at the time citing an official delay and an accompanying statement about needing more time to deliver the intended experience.
By mid-2023, Capcom communications moved from a target window to no timeframe, with coverage highlighting an apologetic delay message (“heavy heart” / “need more time”) attached to the 2023 trailer update, reinforcing the perception of uncertainty.
Against that backdrop, a high-80s Metacritic outcome became “surprising” mainly because long gaps and repeated delays often correlate (in consumer perception) with troubled production; 2026 coverage explicitly notes that Pragmata was “something of an open question” review-wise due to multiple delays and an earlier 2022 ambition before eventually landing well with critics.
Pragmata gameplay overview: sci-fi action adventure and combat systems
Metacritic’s product summary frames Pragmata as a sci-fi action-adventure featuring protagonist Hugh and an android companion, set in a lunar facility overtaken by rogue AI, with the pair searching for a way back to Earth.
Contemporary reviews emphasise that the headline mechanic is combat built around hacking: in Tom’s Guide’s review, engagements revolve around completing a mini-game to lower enemy shields before weapons do meaningful damage, positioning the game closer to “tactical shooter with puzzle pacing” than a conventional third-person shooter.
TechRadar’s review similarly describes simultaneous hacking and gunplay, with an on-screen matching/puzzle layer representing hacking, and notes that weapons are disposable (requiring adaptation as guns are depleted).
Capcom’s March 2026 Spotlight recap (published via PlayStation.Blog) places the release in April 2026 and frames the launch as the end of a “long wait,” aligning with a marketing push that included updated timing and a formalised rollout close to launch.
Resident Evil Requiem review breakdown: horror design, story, and performance
A consistent thread in critic commentary is that Resident Evil Requiem is structurally split between survival-horror tension and action spectacle. TechRadar’s review describes a strong first half that blends horror with action, followed by later sections that lean harder into action and fan-service, while still praising visuals and classic exploration/puzzle elements.
Metacritic’s own critic breakdown reflects broad positivity despite disagreement on narrative cohesion: 133 critic reviews with a strong positive ratio and no negative reviews logged at the time of capture, consistent with “generally favourable” consensus rather than polarisation.
On performance and technical presentation, third-party analysis is comparatively bullish across platforms, with specific spotlight on Switch 2’s porting effort: Nintendo Life summarises a Digital Foundry assessment that Switch 2 targets 60fps with an unlocked framerate but often runs in the 40s–50s docked, with dips to 30fps in heavy spots and somewhat lower handheld performance.
On PC tuning, Wccftech describes a generally stable PC profile in early testing and frames its coverage as guidance for optimised settings (including data-driven performance tests and the presence of different graphics modes and features like ray tracing).
Monster Hunter Stories 3 review roundup: best platforms and performance
Metacritic’s platform-level reception suggests PC is the best-reviewed version by score (87 on PC vs 81 on Switch 2, with PS5/Xbox Series X at 86), indicating that the portable version is likely the most compromised critical package.
A deeper view of cross-platform performance comes from RPG Site’s multi-platform comparison, which reports that Switch 2 lacks graphics options and runs with an uncapped framerate hovering just above 30fps during exploration, with better moments indoors and in some combat animations, while calling out pacing and handheld feel as key drawbacks.
The same comparison indicates that PS5 and Xbox Series X offer multiple graphics priority modes (quality/balanced/performance) and deliver substantially higher frame rates than Switch 2 docked, especially when paired with VRR displays—reinforcing “best platform” conclusions that favour home consoles or PC over Switch 2 for performance stability.
Switch 2-specific review observations from Nintendo Life also describe an unlocked framerate that commonly wobbles in the 30–45fps range in overworld traversal and is considered “functional” for a turn-based RPG, but disappointing relative to expectations for the hardware and engine.
Is Resident Evil Requiem the best Resident Evil game in years?
On a strictly Metacritic basis, Resident Evil Requiem stands above several recent mainline entries: Resident Evil Village is listed at 84 (PS5) and Resident Evil 7: biohazard at 86 (PS4) on their primary Metacritic pages, while Resident Evil Requiem is listed at 89 (PS5) as of capture—supporting the claim that it is the best-scoring “new” mainline entry of the modern era relative to those comparators.
However, Metacritic comparisons also show that Requiem does not surpass the franchise’s highest-scoring modern benchmarks. Metacritic’s “Related Games” panel for Resident Evil Requiem lists Resident Evil 4 (2005) at 96 and Resident Evil 4 at 93, illustrating that Requiem’s score, while strong, does not “reign supreme” within the broader series history.
A contemporary summary explicitly frames this hierarchy: GamesRadar+ reports that launch-period Metacritic scoring positioned Requiem above Biohazard and Village while remaining below the Resident Evil 2 and Resident Evil 4 remakes and the original 2005 Resident Evil 4.
How Metacritic calculates game scores (Metascore vs user score)
Metacritic’s support documentation states that a Metascore is a weighted average of reviews from top critics and publications, with critic scores converted to a 0–100 scale and then combined using publication weightings; for game reviews, Metacritic notes that scores on the site come from the publications themselves rather than being assigned by Metacritic staff.
Metacritic also states that user votes are not included in Metascore calculations; the User Score shown on product pages is separate and reflects user voting/ratings displayed alongside the Metascore.
For interpretation, Metacritic explains that Metascores range 0–100 and are colour-coded (green for favourable, yellow for mixed, red for unfavourable); it also notes game review scoring norms where publications treat below 50 as negative and “upper 70s or higher” as clearly good, which informs Metacritic’s presentation and colour breakdown logic for games.
Metacritic “best games this year” list for 2026 explained
Metacritic’s “Best Games This Year” browser is a filterable list designed to surface the highest-scoring releases inside selected constraints (notably release year and platforms, plus a visible release type filter area), and it is presented as a discovery tool: “Find your next game for any platform. Filter by platform, genre, or release year.”
The 2026 snapshot of the list is not restricted to only brand-new IP; it demonstrably includes re-releases/editions and at least one expansion-style listing, such as Resident Evil 7: biohazard – Gold Edition and Cult of the Lamb: Woolhaven appearing in the top 10.
For multi-platform games, the single Metascore shown in the all-platform “Best Games This Year” list typically corresponds to a specific platform page (commonly the one with the largest critic review pool), while the product page’s “All Platforms” panel can show higher or lower platform Metascores—e.g., Resident Evil Requiem appears at 89 on the all-platform list, while its Xbox and PC platform pages are higher (93 and 92) with fewer critic reviews.
Capcom’s “golden age” streak: how 2026 compares to recent hits
Metacritic’s annual publisher ranking report (published 25 March 2026, evaluating 2025 releases) places Capcom in the top three again, explicitly stating that Capcom “landed its third consecutive top-three finish” thanks to a consistently strong 2025 slate led by Monster Hunter Wilds (listed there as Capcom’s best 2025 game at 90).
That same Metacritic publisher report adds that Capcom was already “off to a roaring start in 2026,” explicitly naming Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection and Resident Evil Requiem as early-2026 examples with strong reviews, strengthening the case that the 2026 top-10 clustering is part of a multi-year critical run rather than an isolated blip.
In parallel, recent journalism frames this as a broader creative and critical streak: Games coverage describing Capcom’s “golden age” points directly to Resident Evil Requiem, Monster Hunter Stories 3, and Pragmata appearing among Metacritic’s best-reviewed 2026 games to date.
Pragmata vs Resident Evil Requiem: which Capcom game reviews better in 2026?
On Metacritic’s main platform pages as of capture, Resident Evil Requiem leads Pragmata by 3 Metascore points (89 vs 86), and it does so with a substantially larger critic sample size (133 critic reviews vs 91).
Platform maxima similarly favour Resident Evil Requiem: its best platform score is 93 (Xbox Series X) compared with Pragmata’s best platform score of 89 (Switch 2).
User-score comparison is asymmetric: Metacritic shows a mature, large-scale user signal for Resident Evil Requiem (9.4 based on 13,850 user ratings), while Pragmata’s user reviews are listed as not yet available on its Metacritic page at the time of capture—so user sentiment cannot be compared like-for-like.
Why DLC and re-releases can change Metacritic top 10 rankings
Metacritic’s top-10 snapshot for 2026 so far includes titles that are not strictly new base-game launches, such as a “Gold Edition” re-release (Resident Evil 7: biohazard – Gold Edition) and an expansion-like listing (Cult of the Lamb: Woolhaven). Their inclusion can directly displace base-game launches from the top 10 because the list is sorted by Metascore within the chosen filters.
This effect is explicitly acknowledged in reporting about Capcom’s 2026 run: coverage notes that Pragmata can be outside the top 10 if DLC and re-releases are counted, and inside the top 10 if those entries are excluded—illustrating how editorial definitions (and list filtering) can produce different “top 10” narratives even when the underlying Metascores are unchanged.
Metacritic’s own publisher-ranking methodology further clarifies why “versioning” matters: multi-platform releases count as multiple “scored products” but a single “distinct title,” and the report distinguishes between platform variants and distinct games when aggregating a publisher’s year. That same logic helps explain why re-releases on a new platform in a new year can re-enter “best of year” conversations and affect rankings.
10 Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
- What is Pragmata about?
Metacritic describes Pragmata as a sci-fi action-adventure following Hugh and an android companion through a lunar facility overtaken by rogue AI as they search for a route back to Earth. - What is Pragmata’s Metacritic score in 2026?
Metacritic lists Pragmata at 86 (PS5) based on 91 critic reviews at the time of capture, with platform variants reaching 89 on Switch 2 and 88 on PC. - What is Resident Evil Requiem’s Metacritic score and how strong is critic consensus?
Metacritic lists Resident Evil Requiem at 89 (PS5) based on 133 critic reviews, with a critic breakdown showing 97% positive, 3% mixed, and 0% negative at the time of capture. - Does Metacritic include user votes in the Metascore?
Metacritic’s support documentation states that user votes are not included in Metascore calculations; the Metascore is generated from published critic reviews, while user voting is reflected separately as the User Score. - Why can the same game have different Metascores on different platforms?
Metacritic maintains separate product pages per platform, each with its own critic review set and resulting Metascore; for example, Resident Evil Requiem is listed at 89 on PS5, but 93 on Xbox Series X and 92 on PC with smaller critic sample sizes on those platforms. - Why is Monster Hunter Stories 3 rated lower on Switch 2 than on PC?
Metacritic shows 81 for Switch 2 and 87 for PC at the time of capture, and platform-focused coverage attributes Switch 2’s drawbacks primarily to performance and presentation compromises (uncapped ~30fps-class exploration with pacing issues and softer handheld image quality). - Why do re-releases like Resident Evil 7: biohazard – Gold Edition appear in 2026 “best games” lists?
The Switch 2 version of Resident Evil 7: biohazard – Gold Edition has a 2026 release date on Metacritic (27 February 2026) and is therefore eligible for “this year” browsing and ranking within those filters, where it appears in the 2026 top 10 snapshot. - Is Resident Evil Requiem better received than Resident Evil 7 and Village?
On Metacritic’s primary platform pages, Resident Evil Requiem (89) exceeds Resident Evil 7: biohazard (86) and Resident Evil Village (84), supporting the claim that it is stronger than those two predecessors by Metascore. - Is Resident Evil Requiem the highest-rated Resident Evil game on Metacritic?
No: Metacritic’s related-game comparisons list Resident Evil 4 (2005) at 96 and the 2023 Resident Evil 4 remake at 93, both above Resident Evil Requiem’s 89 (PS5) at the time of capture. - Can Metacritic’s 2026 top 10 list change later in the year?
Yes: Metacritic’s browsing lists are driven by the set of releases within the selected filters and sorted by Metascore, so additional major releases, platform versions, re-releases, or DLC pages that earn high Metascores can alter the top 10 composition over time.
conclusion
Metacritic’s 2026 datasets (as of 15 April 2026) support the core “golden age” framing in a measurable way: Resident Evil Requiem (#2), Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection (#9), and Pragmata (#10) all appear in Metacritic’s “Best Games This Year” top 10 snapshot, while Capcom’s broader release slate includes additional 2026-scored products (notably Switch 2 re-releases) that reinforce the perception of sustained momentum.
The strongest quantitative signal is Resident Evil Requiem: high critic volume, high platform peaks (Xbox/PC), a robust critic positivity ratio, and a very large, strongly positive user score on its main page. Pragmata’s critical success is especially notable given the long delay cycle documented from 2020 through 2023 into its eventual 2026 release, while Monster Hunter Stories 3 shows classic cross-platform variation where Switch 2 performance caveats align with its lower platform Metascore.
Finally, Metacritic list narratives remain sensitive to definitions: DLC and re-releases can appear among the year’s best-reviewed entries and can shift top-10 headlines, even when the underlying critical reception of new base games is stable.
sources and citation
Metacritic product pages and lists underpin all score and ranking claims, including the 2026 top-10 snapshot and platform-by-platform breakdowns for Resident Evil Requiem, Pragmata, and Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection.
Metacritic’s support documentation is used for methodology (Metascore definition, weighting, user-score separation, and interpretation guidance), and Metacritic’s annual publisher ranking report is used for publisher-level “streak” context and scoring terminology.
Official and specialist context sources include Capcom’s March 2026 Spotlight recap via PlayStation.Blog for release-window framing, multi-platform performance analysis for Monster Hunter Stories 3, and major review coverage for Pragmata and Resident Evil Requiem to support thematic synthesis (gameplay, pacing, and technical framing).









