Draugoth
Gold Member
Game Information
Game Title: Quantum Error
Platforms:
- PlayStation 5 (Oct 31, 2023)
Developer: TeamKill Media
Review Aggregator:
OpenCritic - 49 average - 0% recommended - 5 reviews

Critic Reviews
COGconnected - Mark Steighner - 50 / 100GameSpew - Richard Seagrave - 5 / 10Quantum Error desperately wants to just be a dystopian sci-fi CGI film, without any pesky gameplay to kill its momentum. Alas, there is a clunky, antiquated, and unrefined shooter wedged between the game’s Unreal Engine 5 cinematics. Love and attention was poured into the cutscenes, but the shooter is malnourished and not very much fun. Next time, just make a movie.
GamingTrend - Henry Viola - 40 / 100Credit where credit’s due: considering this is made by just four brothers, Quantum Error aims high, which is admirable. The execution is simply not there, though. This is a game that simply tries to do too much, and as a result feels messy. If you’ve got a lot of patience and really like the idea of being a firefighter caught in a horrifying situation, you might get get something out of Quantum Error. Most, though, will just encounter frustration.
PSX Brasil - Rui Celso - Portuguese - 55 / 100At the end of the day, I ask myself these questions about Quantum Error given the many genres it is trying to tackle. As a shooter game, is it fun? No. As a horror game, is it scary? Nope. As a firefighter simulator, is it cool? Sometimes I guess. Would I recommend this title as a full priced 60 dollar game? Never. TeamKill Media has done a commendable job being only a team of 4 to come up with something this massive and ambitious. However, this is another sad case of biting off more than you could chew. This might be up your alley if you're into janky, B-movie messes.
WayTooManyGames - Todd Eggleston - 6.5 / 10Quantum Error's proposal was interesting, but the final product delivers a confusing and nonsensical narrative, harsh gameplay, poor level design, and generic enemies. Only with a good promotion and many fixes for you to risk venturing into the Nomad complex.
Quantum Error still has the chance to become something, if the developers can take a step back and learn and grow. There is love and there is passion, you can feel it, it just outweighs the skill. So, I ask, what are you? Are you a generic asset flip or are you one of the better remasters, an homage if you will, of a never released game from the early 2000s I never had a chance to love?