Menu
Theme

Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora

Released: 12/7/2023

Critics
72
vs
Users
76

Score Breakdown

72.2

Critic Average

17 reviews

76

Steam User Score

11,502 reviews

71

Metacritic User Score

1,093 reviews

Disparity Breakdown

Steam Disparity
-3.9

72 vs 76

Metacritic Disparity
+1.2

72 vs 71

Combined Disparity
-1.3

Average of both sources

Review Disparities

Positive = critic higher than usersNegative = critic lower than users

Each point represents a critic review. Hover for details. Positive = critic higher than users. Negative = critic lower.

12/23/2023

Launch Window

Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora is one of Ubisoft's most mesmerizing games and also a fine tribute to the world created by James Cameron. Although the story fails to stand out, the huge setting does, and offers both newcomers and veterans an experience hard to forget.

70

70/100

Read

12/19/2023

Launch Window

Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora is an astonishing achievement, with exquisite visuals and a remarkable balance between pacifism and action. This is an enthralling alien world that plays host to a unique FPS.

90

90/100

Read

12/13/2023

Launch Window

Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora is a beautiful game to look at that occasionally delivers moments of excellence, but it lacks the depth underneath to deliver a mesmerizing and unforgettable experience worthy of its technological prowess.

60

60/100

Read

12/12/2023

Launch Window

Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora is not an unforgettable open world experience, but it remains a solid, action-adventure that lasts the right amount of time and is graphically spectacular, although with such a brand and with a "fuller" and focused map it could have delivered even more.

78

78/100

Read

12/12/2023

Launch Window

Frontiers of Pandora's stunning presentation and fantastic world design are failed by atrocious technical issues.

50

50/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

Though it includes a lot of familiar open-world elements, a minimalistic user interface, fun movement mechanics, and a gorgeous setting make it a blast to explore Pandora.

80

80/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

Like it or not, Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora feels like the perfect companion piece to James Cameron’s movies: it’s big but often intimate. Savage but calm. Familiar but charming. Even without playing a single minute of it, you should know whether it’s something you want to play. If you decide to make the jump, I suggest letting go of cheap analogies and using Na’vi instincts first and gamer brain second.

80

80/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

It's not without its flaws, but Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora is still one of Ubisoft's best games of recent years.

85

85/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

Look past Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora’s dull story and you’ll find spectacle and freedom lurking in its Na’vi customs and breathtaking ecosystems.

80

80/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

It doesn't break the mold in its gameplay proposal, but Avatar Frontiers of Pandora is an amazing recreation of this cinematic universe, with gameplay and narrative moments that will impact you.

87

87/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora can't put its human nature aside long enough to properly honor the Na'vi.

60

60/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

It helps that you can see what you're doing when you're driving around a desert.

50

50/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

If you walked away from Avatar wishing a world like Pandora actually existed out there, here you go. This is that world. Seeing Pandora is one thing, but being able to scale its massive treetops, soar high above its floating mountains on an Ikran, and traverse its wide open plains on the back of a Direhorse is really something special. This is the best version of Avatar yet.

90

90/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora features a stunning alien world to explore, but doesn’t contain as many genuine surprises as other modern open-worlds.

70

70/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

In the face of an IP filled with rich themes with something important to say, Frontiers of Pandora ignores the point entirely and goes on to have a gameplay loop where players spend most of their time killing otherwise docile animals to make arbitrary numbers go up so they can be as immortal as possible within the confines of the game. This would be business as usual for any other open-world gameplay loop, but it's embarrassingly ironic and tone-deaf for an Avatar game. Sure, anti-pollution sentiments are there because it's impossible to make an Avatar spin-off without them, but they're there superficially and treated as a checkbox for players to complete - ultimately ringing hollow. A betrayal of Cameron’s themes with the Avatar IP, seemingly stapled together as an attempt to get a slice of the highest-grossing film of all time’s pie, Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora isn’t just generic; it is downright cynical.

50

50/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

A decent, if unspectacular take, on an alien Far Cry that uses its source material well to create an engaging world to explore.

70

70/100

Read

12/6/2023

Early Review

Even so, I found a lot to love in Frontiers of Pandora, including the welcome addition of two-player online cooperative play, which lets players enjoy the game with a friend. With time, the many interlocking features started to make sense, and I pushed past any frustrations to find a remarkably large and rewarding game. Enter Pandora’s vast wilderness with patience and a willingness for a measured march to understanding, and I suspect you’ll uncover what I did – a flawed but still praiseworthy addition to this growing science fiction universe.

78

77.5/100

Read