The latest in 2K's Civilization series comes to Xbox next week in the form of Civ 7, and some early reviews are now hitting the web for Firaxis Games' new strategy title. We're happy to say that things are looking pretty good so far!
How good? Well, down below are summaries of some of the early reviews for Sid Meier's Civilization VII, and you can jump into this one when it launches for Xbox Series X|S next week.
VGC (5/5)
"Civilization VII is bold enough to add big changes to its formula, without getting rid of everything that has made the series iconic. Say goodbye to your free time, as from PC to handheld, every waking moment will be consumed by One More Turn."
The Guardian (5/5)
"There are still few moments in video games as pleasing as building the Hanging Gardens, or discovering a bountiful new location for a town, or marching a phalanx of troops into a battered enemy capital. This game, which once almost cost me my job, will gracefully sneak away with hours, days and possibly months of your life. But then, nobody ever conquered the world in an afternoon."
Windows Central (4.5/5)
"Civilization 7's biggest changes fix mid- and end-game pacing, clean up clutter on the map, and open up more strategic avenues than ever before. Victory and unit balancing will no doubt be tweaked as developers receive feedback and data, but otherwise, the game is in a great state (something that's becoming increasingly rare in AAA games). Pricing and DLC gripes aside, Civilization 7 should prove to be the best playground for world domination for years to come."
Screen Rant (9/10)
"Midway through my fourth game of Civ 7, I forced myself to go to bed to squeeze in a minimally appropriate amount of sleep before work. When I woke up in the morning, my first thought was that I wanted to keep building my empire, and that's when I finally knew how I felt about the game. Sid Meier's Civilization 7 is streamlined, strange, and bound to be divisive. It's also, undeniably, Sid Meier's Civilization. As ever, the series stands apart."
TechRadar Gaming (4/5)
"Sid Meier's Civilization 7 successfully evolves the long-running strategy series with a wealth of engaging new systems. Swapping Civs is smartly implemented and the focus on distinct ages prevents matches from dragging on, though the samey Legacy Path system and basic diplomacy mean that it’s not quite the best entry yet."
GamesRadar (4/5)
"Civilization 7 is a revolutionary strategy game for newcomers and long-time fans alike. Though some tweaks around diplomacy and Ages fall short, a host of small reinventions – along with Firaxis' biggest gamble in tackling the tedium of long-running campaigns – pays off superbly."
IGN (7/10)
"With Civilization 7, the desire to streamline and simplify this legendary 4X series feels like it has gone a bit too far, particularly when it comes to the interface. It’s frustratingly inadequate at providing me with the information I need to play well, or even understand what's going on sometimes."
PCGamesN (7/10)
"Firaxis combats the inherent bloat of the 4X genre with partial success. All of the big new ideas in Civilization 7 work well and it's tighter and more engaging than any of its predecessors. Nevertheless, your sense of connection still begins to wane by the midgame."
Eurogamer (2/5)
"Its design broadly works, and a certain kind of city-optimising fan may even love it. But its lack of character is endemic, the extent of its annoying habits and oversights shocking for a series of such pedigree. It's a dull, contradictory game, and instead of showing everyone how it's done, it's felt since hour one like a game that leaves the 4X throne empty."
It's worth keeping in mind that these early reviews are based on the PC version of Civilization 7, so we'll have to see how the console versions fare in the coming days and weeks. At the time of posting, Civilization VII has a Metacritic score of 81 and an OpenCritic rating of 88, with the game launching for Xbox Series X|S on February 11th, 2025.
Thinking you might pick this one up? Talk to us about Civ 7 down in the comments below.
Comments 10
I've read a few concerns in some of the 'less glowing' reviews that really concerned me and have given me pause for thought.
I have been looking forwards to this release, but my concerns are enough I shall wait for some longer term feedback before jumping in now.
I'm hoping my concerns are unfounded or will be patched soon, but until then I'll keep my money.
Meh. Given the huge price drops with Civ 6, I am waiting until they are in the same range as Civ 6.
I'm really excited for this game as a lifelong fan of the franchise. I also know that the first year or so of the newest game can feel like a step backwards from the former game. The most disappointing thing is that mods won't be there at launch.
I might wait a bit or just dive in at launch. Still mulling over the decision.
The eras mechanic where you change civs makes me nervous. I hope that I come around on that once I try it.
Excited about this game!!!
I've never really been into these sorts of games. Tried them on PC back many years ago, and just wasn't smart enough lol.
I really enjoyed Civ 1 & 2 - like seriously obsessed… then haven’t played it… so I got Civ 6 on sales and will see how it goes … anyone got a particular fave version? mine would be 2
Its the same situation with civ every single time at least from 5th. It releases missing half of features and very unbalanced. It takes years to get it to proper working state. I played civ 5 until 6th was already 3-4 years on the market. Only then i switched to 6.
So buying this today is paying basically deluxe price for beta version (deluxe edition already have dlc with new civ and such).
This new release taught me that the majority of civ players absolutely hate paying full price for a game they will spends hundreds if not thousands of hours in.
It’s a strange take on Civ, basically forcing you to play exactly the way they want, not how you might chose to play:
-You must change civs each era
-You must endure your empire being downgraded each new era start
-You must engage in colonisation in the exploration age and you must build treasure fleets every time or your civ happiness plummets (various reviews mention this). Like Pangea games? Too bad. Like any map that isn’t terra? Too bad. Like to turtle on your home continent and build Tall? Too bad.
I feel at launch it will make for some very repetitive gameplay after a few game sessions. No doubt expansions may change some of the above or give more options, so I guess I’ll wait and see before buying. On Civ6 I’ll remain for now - and still a handful of achievements to grind!
I remember playing the base Civ 6 game without any of the expansions and the game worked perfectly without crashing but almost all the game mechanics were broken. Even the tutorial doesn't actually tell you how to capture a city or to win a dominion victory, it just starts the game and then has no ending. Really wish the tutorial actually told you that cities can't be captured with ranged units.
Leave A Comment
Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...