Skip to main content
Tech Radar TechRadar the technology experts
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
RSS
Asia
flag of Singapore
Singapore
Europe
flag of Danmark
Danmark
flag of Suomi
Suomi
flag of Norge
Norge
flag of Sverige
Sverige
flag of UK
UK
flag of Italia
Italia
flag of Nederland
Nederland
flag of België (Nederlands)
België (Nederlands)
flag of France
France
flag of Deutschland
Deutschland
flag of España
España
North America
flag of US (English)
US (English)
flag of Canada
Canada
flag of México
México
Australasia
flag of Australia
Australia
flag of New Zealand
New Zealand
  • Phones
  • Computing
  • TVs
  • AI
  • Streaming
  • Health
  • Audio
  • VPN
  • More
    • Cameras
    • Home
    • News
    • Reviews
    • Opinion
    • How to
    • Versus
    • Deals
    • Coupons
    • Best
Tech Radar Pro
Tech Radar Gaming
Trending
  • Nintendo Switch 2
  • WWDC
  • Best laptop
  • Best VPN
  • ChatGPT
  • Best web hosting
  • NYT Wordle today

Recommended reading

Baldur's Gate 3 official artwork showing Astarion, Showdowheart, Gale, and Tieflings
PC Gaming The 20 best PC games to play in 2025
Baldur's Gate 3 keyart with Astarion, Shadowheart, and Lae'zel
PC Gaming The 17 best Mac games to play in 2025
The main battle pass characters in Fortnite Lawless, including Midas, Sub Zero and a large wolf-man
PC Gaming The best multiplayer PC games 2025
Best PC controllers
Gaming Best PC controllers in 2025: top gamepads from GameSir, Thrustmaster and more
Close up of gaming keyboard being used
Computing Gaming keyboards seem to be getting better and better – but there are still some features I wish they had
A knight on horseback walks through a lush, green forest
Gaming The best Steam games 2025
Image of the PlayStation Portal handheld gaming device
Gaming Best PlayStation Portal games in 2025
  1. Gaming
  2. Consoles & PC
  3. PC Gaming

6 genres that are always better on PC

News
By Henrietta Rowlatt published 24 April 2017

From strategy to shooters, the PC makes certain games sing

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Introduction

Introduction

The videogame wars have been a constant presence down the years, ever since the days when gamers argued the relative merits of the Commodore 64 versus ZX Spectrum, right up until today's Project Scorpio versus PS4 Pro bun-fights. But there have also always been overarching arguments about whether home computers or consoles provide a better overall gaming experience.

The truth is that both PCs and consoles have their respective advantages, but when it comes to certain genres, the PC clearly offers more for various reasons – such as greater graphical power, better control schemes, modifications to inject more life into games, and so forth.

So which genres are best experienced on the PC? Click through our gallery to find out.

Welcome to TechRadar's 3rd annual PC Gaming Week,  celebrating the almighty gaming PC with in-depth interviews, previews,  reviews and features all about one of the TechRadar team’s favorite  pastimes. Missed a day? Check out our constantly updated hub article for all of the coverage in one place.

Page 1 of 7
Page 1 of 7
1. Simulators

1. Simulators

In 1989, SimCity was the simulation game to rule them all. Governance over an entire city was revolutionary at the time, but it wouldn't have worked on, say, the Nintendo Entertainment System. In fact, console ports of these kinds of games have proved worthless time and time again.

And, while they've begun to stagnate over the years due to their improved viability in the mobile market, simulation developers have -- for whatever reason -- decided to keep controller support coming to the presumed disappointment of their audience.

Whether you're building a sprawling metropolis in Cities: Skylines (pictured), joysticking it to the man in Microsoft Flight Simulator or raising a family in The Sims, simulation games are undoubtedly most at home on PC. We admit there's certainly some potential on mobile platforms too.

Page 2 of 7
Page 2 of 7
2. Strategy games

2. Strategy games

We're including both real-time and turn-based because, quite frankly, they're all better on PC. Civilization VI is a case in point – it's only truly available on PC, as Mac OS can only support the single player campaign and consoles cannot handle it all. Looking back, it took three years before Civ II was ported to the PlayStation, and by that time the PC already had Age Of Empires II.

Most strategy games have to be pared down for console consumption as their internal architecture means the processing power is balanced heavily on graphical output rather than raw number crunching. That's why football manager sims always feel like demos on consoles. The Total War series, the newest of which is Warhammer 2, release date pending, has never ventured out to our console brethren – consoles just can't handle the real-time battles and system requirements.

That's not to say that it's impossible and foolhardy to make a playable and enjoyable strategy game on a console, as Halo Wars on the Xbox and Advance Wars on the humble GBA proved. Certain concessions have to be made – the lack of keyboard and mouse means that not all the options are available all the time as they are on PC, and selecting units can be finicky without a mouse. So it's a strategic move to stick with a PC.

Page 3 of 7
Page 3 of 7
3. First-person shooters

3. First-person shooters

Yeah Halo, yeah, yeah, Call Of Duty, blah blah blah, whatever! There is no way of nailing a satisfying headshot without a mouse. With the pointer you can even pick which eyeball you want to pop out first. Counter-Strike, DayZ (although it's more of a survival horror), Team Fortress and Portal were all originally PC mods. They were all so successful as mods that they were made into games in their own right, many sprouting sequels. Modification is at the heart of PC gaming and the FPS genre is where most of the innovation takes place.

Garry's Mod converted FPS classic Half-Life 2 into a sandbox game with no objectives. It could be said that it was the blueprint for the all-conquering Minecraft, another game that started on PC. But we're getting away from FPS here – let's get back to shooting, first-person shooting.

It's all about the mouse, there's no need for auto-aim on a PC, because targeting is so precise with a mouse. It's apt as the original trackball was invented in 1946 as a post WWII firing system. Its inventor Ralph Benjamin felt that a trackball was more elegant and accurate than a joystick and how little things have changed.

Page 4 of 7
Page 4 of 7
4. RPGs

4. RPGs

You can keep your Final Fantasies and Skyrim (though it is very good on PC), an RPG's home will always be on PC. From the early days of Ultima, which was the first to dip into the waters of online gaming, up to the hulking monolith that is World Of Warcraft, RPGs on PC have more scope to play with, and more hard drive space too. Of course it's difficult to compare these games to poppy platform JPRGs such as the upcoming Kingdom Hearts III, which are great fun to play but lack depth and online capability.

Consoles are also closed platforms, unless you count Sony's Net Yaroze, meaning that even if you know how to program you won't be able to make a game, let alone release it. PCs don't have those kind of restrictions meaning Kickstarter campaigns have sprung up everywhere including the exciting looking sequel to Planescape: Torment, Torment: Tides of Numenera. Another Kickstarter to look out for is Moon Hunters, which looks like a cross between Harvest Moon and Gauntlet.

Page 5 of 7
Page 5 of 7
5. Adventures

5. Adventures

Adventure games have an incredibly long history on the platform, though many times people have rang their death knell. Just like the music critics who keep predicting the end of guitar music, it never dies out does it?

Telltale Games are now making a six part Game of Thrones adventure – a few years ago it would have been a hack-and-slash affair. Adventure games are back with a bang and the biggest innovations are on PC. Papers, Please has won oodles of awards for combining a simple border checkpoint sim (and no, we can't think of any others) with the sharpness of a point-and-click adventure.

Older franchises are being resurrected – graphical text adventure pioneers Sierra announced its return last year and is currently making a brand new King's Quest game. It's been 17 years since the last one, that's almost as long as My Bloody Valentine fans waited for their latest album (22 years in case you were wondering).

Tim Schafer classics such as Day of the Tentacle and Grim Fandango have been or are in the process of being remastered. And oddball games are sprouting up on Kickstarter such as Aviary Attorney – think Phoenix Wright with pigeons – and the Flashback inspired Candle.

Page 6 of 7
Page 6 of 7
6. Sandbox games

6. Sandbox games

Surely one of the original sandbox games was the demo to Motorcross Madness back in 1998? Ignore the idiot NPCs going around the track and head straight out into the desert. Before long you'd hit a cliff. With enough speed and the right angle you could get up the cliff. On top the view was breath-taking, and possibly a little foggy if your graphics card wasn't up to it.

Head away from the cliff edge and before long an invisible wall would hurl both you and your bike for miles over the desert to land in a crumpled mess on the floor. Fast forward to GTA V on PC in 2015 and things aren't that much different, except this time you've got a parachute and a rocket launcher.

Second Life is perhaps the most divisive of all sandbox games. On the one hand it's an innovative open world in which the late, great Terry Pratchett visited for a live Q&A, and Jay-Z has performed live in there, but it also has a reputation for attracting geeks who live their first lives in there.

Minecraft is still the crown jewel in the PC sandbox crown (a crown made of sand probably wouldn't work very well, though). And although it has been released on consoles, its home is here on the PC. Boasting nearly 20 million sales, unlike Second Life, Minecraft is getting younger gamers into PCs and it's creating the PC gamers and designers of the future.

Page 7 of 7
Page 7 of 7
Henrietta Rowlatt
Read more
Baldur's Gate 3 official artwork showing Astarion, Showdowheart, Gale, and Tieflings
The 20 best PC games to play in 2025
Baldur's Gate 3 keyart with Astarion, Shadowheart, and Lae'zel
The 17 best Mac games to play in 2025
The main battle pass characters in Fortnite Lawless, including Midas, Sub Zero and a large wolf-man
The best multiplayer PC games 2025
Best PC controllers
Best PC controllers in 2025: top gamepads from GameSir, Thrustmaster and more
Close up of gaming keyboard being used
Gaming keyboards seem to be getting better and better – but there are still some features I wish they had
A knight on horseback walks through a lush, green forest
The best Steam games 2025
Latest in PC Gaming
A person streaming a PC game onto a handheld gaming device using Razer PC Remote Play.
Razer PC Remote Play lets you stream games to your iPhone – and it could convince me to switch from my gaming PC
Image of Naoe in AC Shadows
Assassin's Creed Shadows is hands-down one of the most beautiful PC ports I've ever seen
Image of AC Shadows cover art & Steam Deck
It's not perfect, but Assassin's Creed Shadows' performance is impressive - it runs smoothly on the Steam Deck and Asus ROG Ally
Asus ROG Ally using Steam
I think Asus could be the perfect partner for an Xbox handheld – but I have questions
Playing games on the Razer Handheld Dock Chroma without an external display.
The Razer Handheld Dock Chroma offers Steam Deck owners a premium design and, of course, plenty of RGB
Image of GTA 6 protagonists and PS5
GTA 6's console-only launch reminds me of how much I despise console exclusivity - is it worth waiting years for PC ports?
Latest in News
Google logo at Made by Google
Spotify and parts of Google were down – here's everything we know about the outage that hit major services
Motherboard close up on PCIe slots
PCIe 7.0 has been announced, offering superfast speeds for the components inside your PC – but don’t get excited just yet
TechRadar Podcast – WWDC 2025
Live from WWDC 2025 – TechRadar podcast unpacks that massive iPadOS update and looks through Liquid Glass
Dia by The Browser Company
AI comes to the URL with a new web browser that answers you back
Apple AirTag
This Android AirTags rival finally got the one big feature it's been missing
Yuhki Yamashita, Figma’s Chief Product Officer, on stage during Config London
Figma unveils big new updates for design and dev - but I'm mostly excited about the rollout of this one tool
LATEST ARTICLES
  1. 1
    AI comes to the URL with a new web browser that answers you back
  2. 2
    Samsung's Galaxy Z Fold 7 Ultra hints are exciting, but I don’t think it will fix the Fold’s biggest flaw
  3. 3
    A system inspired by the human brain has quietly been activated at a US nuclear lab, and it has no operating system or storage
  4. 4
    This German startup wants to build portable quantum computers using diamonds - and says its QPU will sit next to a GPU or a CPU one day
  5. 5
    This Android AirTags rival finally got the one big feature it's been missing

TechRadar is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Web notifications
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...