• Tue. Nov 4th, 2025

Every Game Informer 10/10 Score

A 10/10 score is an honor we at Game Informer don’t bestow often, but it’s a big deal when we do. It involves careful consideration and conversation with the other editors, ensuring that it’s not a number we hand out lightly. Across our outlet’s entire history, only a few dozen games have been awarded the score, and they’re included in this easily accessible list.

However, there are also some fun “almost” 10s throughout Game Informer’s history. By scouring through the magazine archive, we uncovered a handful of instances where 10s were sort of handed out that make for interesting edge cases.

 The Games That Almost Got 10s

The Games That Almost Got 10s

The most common instances of “almost” 10s were in Game Informer’s early days. For the first nine years of the magazine’s lifespan, each game had three reviewers whose scores would be averaged into one “bottom line,” which is generally recognized as Game Informer’s final score. Even then, individual reviews were broken down into numbered scores across five categories (Concept, Graphics, Sound, Playability, and Entertainment), so it was extremely difficult for any game to get a 10. It would need to get perfect (or near-perfect) scores across the board from three separate writers. This, as far as we can tell, never happened.

However, there are instances where one of the three writers scored the game a 10. In issue 3, editor Marianne Morgan gave 10s to Lemmings (SNES) and Shatterhand (NES). In issue 6, Ed Martinez awarded a 10 to Out of this World (SNES). Finally, in issue 40, Paul Anderson gave Super Mario 64 a 10. If they had been the sole reviewers, like most outlets have now, these games would all have 10s, but the other editors’ scores ultimately pulled the average down. The only one of these games close to a 10 was Super Mario 64, which scored a 9.75.

Another edge case comes in issue 43 from October 1996, in a now-retired Classic GI segment on “The Mascot Wars,” chronicling the rivalry between Mario, Sonic, and the then-new Crash Bandicoot. In it, the writer quickly scores the mainline entries of each mascot’s games and gives Super Mario Bros., a game that predates Game Informer by several years, a retroactive 10. It’s far from an official score, however – not only does the game not go through the traditional, rigorous review process, but the list also includes scores inconsistent with the outlet’s published scores. Super Mario 64, for example, is incorrectly given a 9.5.

GI Classic struck again in October of 2000. In issue 90, they revisited Super Mario World, which launched just a few months before the first issue of Game Informer, and gave it a 10. This instance is more formal than before, part of a monthly section fully dedicated to retro reviews, but it’s still abnormal. It was only one opinion, it lacks a byline, and is generally formatted differently than a standard review. 

If we want to reserve the “first” title for a game to receive a 10 upon release, that honor goes to Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 2, which we reviewed in the very next issue, 91. It happens to coincide with an overhaul of Game Informer’s design and structure, with a new logo and a new review process. Each game now receives a primary review and a “second opinion,” which is also scored, but only gets a paragraph or so of text. Category scores are also no more, replaced with short blurbs breaking down the writer’s thoughts on the subject. There were far fewer barriers to score a 10/10 now, and the staff wasted no time doling one out.

There is also one instance of a game receiving a score higher than a 10… though it was an April Fool’s joke. In issue 84, a made-up game called Virtua Laundromat 3: Rinse Cycle for the “Mega Dreamblast” (a parody version of the Sega Dreamcast) scored a 10+. Published in April 2000, this was just seven months before the actual first 10/10 score.

For all 32 of our 10/10 scores, along with the issue each was published in, you can check out the list below. To see them in their original print layouts, you can access most of them* in the Game Informer magazine archive by making a free account and clicking right here.

*(Note: Our free magazine archive includes issue 368 and earlier. To read newer issues, including Astro Bot and Hades II, you can subscribe to Game Informer here.)

 Every Official Game Informer 10

Every Official Game Informer 10, In Chronological Order

1

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 2

Issue 91 – November 2000

“Very few perfect scores have ever been given out by Game Informer, and I’ve never scored anything a 10, but games just don’t come better than this.” – Jay Fitzloff

2

Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty

Issue 104 – December 2001

“If there is a birth of the next generation of gaming, it is here with this title.” – Matthew Kato

3

Grand Theft Auto: Vice City

Issue 116 – December 2002

“If every other publisher in the country has been waiting for Rockstar and Grand Theft Auto’s reign of chart dominance to come to an end, or wishing that GTA III would prove to be a fluke hit – they better be ready to wait another year.” – Matt Helgeson

4

Metroid Fusion

Issue 117 – January 2003

“From beginning to end, Metroid Fusion is everything you could want in a Game Boy Advance title – high-powered original content that surpasses the old 8-bit and 16-bit games that they are derived from.” – Andrew McNamara

5

The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker

Issue 120 – April 2003

“The Wind Waker blows every Zelda game out of the water and stands as the video game event of a lifetime. It’s an absolute necessity for anyone who considers themselves a gamer.” – Andrew Reiner

6

Grand Theft Auto III/Vice City (Double Pack)

Issue 129 – January 2004

“Yes, Halo is more refined and Zelda is more ingenious, but only Grand Theft Auto III and Vice City has that genre-busting, nonlinear sensibility that the development world is trying to catch up with.” – Matt Helgeson

7

Ratchet & Clank: Up Your Arsenal

Issue 139 – November 2004

“After a long and successful history, Insomniac Games has finally created its masterpiece, a tour de force that is the zenith of a trio of titles that I feel should be held up in action/platform history alongside the original Super Mario Bros. trilogy on the NES.” – Matt Helgeson

8

Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas

Issue 140 – December 2004

“San Andreas breaks the video game mold and emerges as something far greater. This is more than a game. This is entertainment at its best.” – Andrew Reiner

9

Halo 2

Issue 140 – December 2004

“Simply put, Halo 2 is by far the greatest first-person shooter the console world has seen to date.” – Andy McNamara

10

Resident Evil 4

Issue 143 – March 2005

“There are no flaws in Resident Evil 4. It is the greatest horror game to date. I never thought that a game, or movie for that matter, could deliver pulse-pounding action in such an awe-inspiring way.” – Andrew Reiner

11

God of War

Issue 144 – April 2005

“While playing God of War, I honestly found it difficult to resist the urge to simply genuflect and be humbled to be in the presence of such digital divinity, this god among games.” – Joe Juba

12

The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess

Issue 165 – January 2007

“The debate that has waged for decades over which Zelda game should stand as the series’ best will at long last come to a satisfying conclusion, as this is unquestionably the greatest Zelda yet.” – Andrew Reiner

13

BioShock

Issue 173 – September 2007

“It’s ingenious, enthralling, and a masterpiece of the most epic proportions.” – Andrew Reiner

14

Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare

Issue 176 – December 2007

“Everything has come together brilliantly, from the nonstop intensity of the offline campaign to the endlessly replayable multiplayer offering. Simply put, Call of Duty 4 is one of the absolute best games to grace any platform to date.” – Adam Biessener

15

Grand Theft Auto IV

Issue 182 – June 2008

“Grand Theft Auto IV doesn’t just raise the bar for the storied franchise; it completely changes the landscape of gaming.” – Andrew Reiner

16

Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots

Issue 183 – July 2008

“As the crowning achievement of the series’ 20-year history, Hideo Kojima’s final Metal Gear Solid title may not be what you expect, but it is everything you could hope for in a video game.” – Joe Juba

17

Uncharted 2: Among Thieves

Issue 199 – November 2009

“Uncharted 2 is a ringing testament to the power of both games and storytelling. It pulls you in, keeps you engaged, and concludes with a thunderous bang.” – Andrew Reiner | Full Review

18

God of War III

Issue 204 – April 2010

“Not even in my wildest dreams could I have imagined such a powerful, cinematic, and breathtaking conclusion to the saga of the Ghost of Sparta.” – Joe Juba | Full Review 

19

StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty

Issue 210 – October 2010

“This is a sublimely engineered game with a simple, elegant core design and all of the rough edges ground away.” – Adam Biessener | Full Review

20

Batman: Arkham City

Issue 223 – November 2011

“Arkham City not only lives up to the standards set by Arkham Asylum, it bests its predecessor in every way and stands tall as one of Batman’s greatest moments.” – Andrew Reiner | Full Review

21

The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword

Issue 224 – December 2011

“As what’s likely to be the last major Wii release from Nintendo, Skyward Sword is a fitting finale for the console. This is the first game I’ve played that delivers on the promise sparked by that initial Wii remote showing.” – Phil Kollar | Full Review

22

Mass Effect 3

Issue 229 – May 2012

“I guided Shepard across three massive games spanning over 100 hours, and feel BioWare has delivered one of the most intricately crafted stories in the history of the medium.” – Andrew Reiner | Full Review

23

BioShock Infinite

Issue 241 – May 2013

“No matter how many parallel realities I ponder, I cannot imagine one in which BioShock Infinite is not among the best games I’ve played.” – Joe Juba | Full Review

24

The Legend of Zelda: A Link Between Worlds

Issue 248 – December 2013

“This isn’t just a tribute; as amazing as A Link to the Past is, I can’t think of a single thing A Link Between Worlds doesn’t do better.” – Dan Ryckert | Full Review

25

The Last Of Us Remastered

Issue 258 – October 2014

“If you never played The Last of Us at all, this is absolutely the way to do it. But be careful – you’ll never want to go back to the PS3 original again after reveling in all the improvements.” – Tim Turi | Full Review

26

Overwatch

Issue 279 – July 2016

“Blizzard has taken its masterful art of polishing and perfection to the team shooter, and things will never be the same.” – Daniel Tack | Full Review

27

The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild

Issue 288 – April 2017

“I was entranced by this version of Hyrule, and it surprised me at nearly every turn, from its wealth of discoveries to the way it shuns the established tropes of previous Zelda games. It represents a profound new direction for one of gaming’s best franchises and a new high point for open-world interactive experiences.” – Kyle Hilliard | Full Review

28

Red Dead Redemption II

Issue 308 – December 2018

“The up-close portrayal of the outlaw Van der Linde gang’s unraveling is a compelling companion story that blends seamlessly with the original game, and depth and breadth of the open world is a technical triumph that every gamer should experience.” – Matt Bertz | Full Review

29

The Last of Us Part II

Issue 327 – July 2020

“I can safely say this is the best narrative game I have played. I felt the loss. I felt the confusion. It is a game that turned me inside out with each twist of the screw.” – Andy McNamara | Full Review

30

Elden Ring

Issue 344 – March 2022

“Elden Ring represents a truly amazing combination of various game elements that all come together to create something fascinating, special, and unforgettable. Elden Ring isn’t just the best game this year; it’s one of the best games ever made.” – Daniel Tack | Full Review

31

Astro Bot

Issue 369 – June 2025

“Astro Bot has always been good at propping up its contemporaries, but the adorable little robot can now proudly stand beside the PlayStation icons it so fondly celebrates.” – Marcus Stewart | Full Review

32

Hades II

Issue 373 – December 2025

“Hades II is the pinnacle of the roguelike genre, a position I previously granted its predecessor, but one that its sequel has handily earned.” – Charles Harte | Full Review

To read these reviews in their original print format, you can make a free account and browse the Game Informer archive right here. To read issues published since our relaunch, you can subscribe here.