Pragmata Sign in to your Polygon.com account Following the well-received Resident Evil Requiem and Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection, Capcom has another critical darling on its hands thanks to Pragmata.
The reviews for Capcom’s long-awaited sci-fi game just dropped, and critics are swooning over the hacker-shooter.
While the reception is just shy of Requiem’s heights, it’s clear that Capcom is the main character of big-budget gaming in 2026.
As of the time of writing, Pragmata sits at an 87 on Opencritic and an 85 on Metacritic.
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That makes it one of the best reviewed AAA games of the year, right up there with… well, Capcom’s other 2026 games.
There isn’t much competition from anyone else aside from Pokémon Pokopia and Nioh 3, though there’s a chance that changes very soon when Saros drops later this month.
There isn’t much of a spectrum when it comes to opinions.
The critical reception is remarkably consistent, with most scored reviews hovering around an 8 or 9.
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In a glowing review for GameSpot, Steve Watts praised Pragmata for just about everything it does.
In particular, the review offers a glowing take on the game’s unique third-person shooting hook, where players need to complete short hacking puzzles to weaken enemies.
“This inventive hook imbues everything in the game with a sense of tension,” Watts wrote in the 9/10 review.
“The need to fire at enemies while also juggling your hack recalls the best moments of Dead Space, when you would suddenly need to change the angular orientation of your gun's projectiles on the fly.
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Encounters become a dance as you determine whether you can spare just enough time to finish the hack before the robot reaches you, or if you need to create some distance.” The A.V.
Club’s Garrett Martin was similarly enthusiastic, viewing Pragmata as a relic from a lost time in gaming where one-off ideas thrived
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Source: [Polygon](https://www.polygon.com/pragmata-review-roundup/)
