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The Epyx Collection: Handheld

Released: 4/25/2024

Critics
68
vs
Users

Score Breakdown

68.3

Critic Average

3 reviews

N/A

Steam User Score

N/A

Metacritic User Score

Disparity Breakdown

Steam Disparity
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Metacritic Disparity
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Combined Disparity
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Average of both sources

Review Disparities

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

Critic Reviews

5/2/2025

Late Review

This is purely a time capsule that plays really well on the go, perfect for anyone who owned a Lynx and folks who love retro games. The collection’s titles run accurately and bonus functions like rewind and save states along with digitised versions of their box arts and manuals make The Epyx Collection: Handheld worth a look. ∎

75

75/100

Read

4/29/2024

Launch Window

For a collection that will only ever appeal to a very limited niche, the Epyx Collection does a decent job of making those games playable on the Switch, but a terrible job of celebrating them. The only way this thing had a chance was to go the full virtual museum tour, and they completely missed that opportunity. As it stands, most people will buy this, play it for five minutes to remember the console they lost to the garage storage boxes decades ago, and then move on.

60

60/100

Read

4/22/2024

Early Review

I’m not going to say that The Epyx Collection: Handheld is an easy recommendation, but it’s a fantastic opportunity for retro gaming enthusiasts to experience a few hidden gems which had previously only been available on a very obscure, but very underrated portable system. You may think this collection is a waste of time because nobody (aside from me and half a dozen other weirdos) owned a Lynx back in the day, but games like Gates of Zendocon and Blue Lightning are still amazing, more than 35 years later.

70

70/100

Read