mindseye
Grand Theft Auto made him a legend. His latest game was a disaster
Grand Theft Auto made him a legend. In July this year workers at Build a Rocket Boy, a video game studio in Edinburgh, were called to an all-staff meeting. Their first ever game, a sci-fi adventure called MindsEye, had been released three weeks earlier - and it had been a total disaster. Critics and players called it broken, buggy, and the worst game of 2025. Addressing staff via video link, the company's boss, Leslie Benzies, assured them there was a plan to get things back on track and said the negativity they'd seen was uncalled for.
- Europe > United Kingdom (0.96)
- North America (0.95)
- Asia (0.70)
MindsEye review – a dystopian future that plays like it's from 2012
It's pretty much a straight copy of the original: a huge soap bubble, half sunk into the desert floor, with its surface turned into a gigantic TV. Occasionally you'll pull up near the Sphere while driving an electric vehicle made by Silva, the megacorp that controls this world. You'll sometimes come to a stop just as an advert for an identical Silva EV plays out on the huge curved screen overhead. The doubling effect can be slightly vertigo-inducing. At these moments, I truly get what MindsEye is trying to do.
- Transportation > Ground > Road (0.71)
- Transportation > Electric Vehicle (0.56)