Technology

Escape from Tarkov review: "An extraction shooter that will make you truly miserable if you let it, but can offer dizzying highs you won't find elsewhere"

2025-11-26 16:00
872 views
Escape from Tarkov review: "An extraction shooter that will make you truly miserable if you let it, but can offer dizzying highs you won't find elsewhere"

Escape from Tarkov review: "An extraction shooter that will make you truly miserable if you let it, but can offer dizzying highs you won't find elsewhere"

GamesRadar+ Verdict

The prototypical extraction shooter, Escape from Tarkov is a shooter I've been playing for the past decade and will be playing for years more. Sublime firefights and just-complicated-enough mechanics make this a great game to lose yourself in, but the immersion only lasts until you need to check the Wiki, which is constantly when you're just starting out.

Check Amazon Check Walmart Pros
  • +

    Phenomenal firefights

  • +

    Detailed economy

  • +

    Great map design

Cons
  • -

    Confusing quest system

  • -

    Late game gear skews balance too far towards experienced players

  • -

    Obtuse design

Best picks for you
  • Best Disney gifts 2025, recommended by a mega-fan

Why you can trust GamesRadar+ Our experts review games, movies and tech over countless hours, so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about our reviews policy.

Escape from Tarkov set the standard for extraction shooters. If you've played Arc Raiders or one of the other success stories in the genre, this FPS might feel familiar: you go into a dangerous map filled with a combination of AI and real-life opponents, fill your bags with loot, and hustle towards an exit. Extract and you get all your loot, which can be used or flogged off to traders and other players. Die, and you lose everything.

I hate it. I love it. But the key thing is that while it's a deeply clunky game, Escape from Tarkov's shootouts are perhaps the best in video games, and the feeling of limping into an extraction point with empty mags and a bag full of loot is something that's kept me coming back for the last decade. With 5000 hours already spent in Tarkov, I'm having a fresh start to see how the game's long-awaited 1.0 release holds up.

Mechanically sound

Escape from Tarkov review

(Image credit: Battlestate Games)Fast facts

Release date: 15 November 2025Platform(s): PCDeveloper: Battlestate GamesPublisher: Battlestate Games

Escape from Tarkov is a brutal, uncaring game that doesn't care much whether you make it to the extraction zone or not. Deaths in Tarkov will often feel unfair but they usually teach a lesson, even if the lesson is "people shoot from that window" or "condensed milk is not good for hydration."Picking a loadout involves not just selecting and outfitting your gun but also remembering to bring magazines for the gun and to load those magazines with ammunition, in addition to loading your pockets with spare rounds for when you inevitably need to top them back up. Those rounds all do different amounts of armor penetration, and some of them will be more accurate or have a higher chance to cause a bleed while some could even make your gun malfunction.Gear maintenance involves not just repairing your armor, but occasionally pulling out damaged plates and replacing them with new ones. You'll update your hideout along the way, scavenging wires and bulbs to make yourself a little home away from home.

Escape from Tarkov review

(Image credit: Battlestate Games)

If you're listening to this and salivating, congratulations. Escape from Tarkov is for you. Still, there's a learning curve that's near-vertical in your first 100 hours of play. The reward for this time and perseverance is phenomenal moment to moment gunplay and deep progression that rivals most MMOs.

Huge realistic maps make firefights feel more real, as you'll push through building sites, abandoned city blocks and even lumber yards in pursuit of loot. These environments make sniping and longer-distance combat feel more interesting than nearly any other live game that I've seen, while being peppered with submachine gun fire in derelict shopping mall Interchange offers close-quarters intensity that few games truly capture.The brilliance comes from pairing low time-to-kill with deep mechanical complexity – bandaging a wound mid firefight, or having to desperately feed bullets into a magazine your life is about to depend on.

War economy

Escape from Tarkov review

(Image credit: Battlestate Games)

Escape from Tarkov is ultimately a game about kicking over sandcastles

Escape from Tarkov's secret sauce is the player-driven economy underpinning every aspect of it.Every piece of loot has genuine value and when you learn that a simple roll of blue tape might make you big bucks, your rucksack suddenly seems like less a bag of different items and more a series of different dollar signs. At first you'll just pick up anything shiny-looking – and honestly, anything you can wedge into your bag – but you'll soon learn there are items much more valuable: long-range optics are particularly prized in those early stages of the game, but at any point I will fight like a cornered animal to extract with just a single screw to improve my hideout.

That pressure exerts itself in a lot of unique ways. The desire to get high-value loot will force you to make stupid choices, even if you think you know better. The fear that you might lose a load of valuable gear also amps up the tension and can make even simple fights feel like desperate struggles.

Sign up to the GamesRadar+ NewsletterContact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

Escape from Tarkov review

(Image credit: Battlestate Games)

Get your hands on a set of Level 6 armour and you'll be nearly impervious to damage to your torso, but you can also sell it for a big stack of cash, which might be a smart option if you think you're likely to get killed and lose it all.

Ammunition is a commodity too. Good bullets are expensive and hard to come by, and that means you'll often try to kill someone in one or two shots rather than half a magazine. When money is tight it's not a matter of how much firepower you can point at a problem, but how much you can afford to spend on a fight when you know another could be minutes away.As your character levels up from extracting and completing quests, you earn cash and better standing with in-game traders that lets you buy better gear – meaning many of these shootouts are asymmetrical, creating another layer of risk versus reward as you never know who else is around the corner.

Hidden knowledge

Escape from Tarkov review

(Image credit: Battlestate Games)Boss Level

After years of tweaking and shuffling, BattleState Games seems to have perfected the bosses that populate the levels. Bosses are currently spawning in 70% of matches and are lethal but can be taken out with careful play and coordinated teamwork. Bringing down a boss is one of Tarkov's hardest challenges, but also one of its more rewarding.

Escape from Tarkov's final release adds a tutorial that aims to imbue all of that knowledge into the players, but it really only gives a surface-level overview of a game that will drown you if you're not prepared.Tarkov does a terrible job in general of explaining how to stay alive or find success, but the perfect microcosm of this is the medical system, with the tutorial being the only time they can show you how to patch yourself up properly when you're not bleeding to death. But which bandage do you need for specific injuries? How do you treat a broken arm? Operate on a damaged limb? You need a lot of knowledge to survive in Tarkov, and the game refuses to hand any of it to you.

This is something you see more when you've stopped bleeding to death every five seconds. Escape from Tarkov outright fails to signpost the maps. You can (and likely will) learn these with a map open on a phone or a second monitor, but the game makes no effort to show where most of the evacuation zones are and I find it hard to believe many players would stumble upon them without the help of a third-party website.

Escape from Tarkov review

(Image credit: Battlestate Games)

Quests offered by traders are also poorly signposted, and so if the Escape from Tarkov Wiki ever does go down, expect people who do know how to do the quests to become valued for their rare knowledge like the mountain guides of old.Want to know how to find and repair the two specific tool panels you need to fix in a factory filled with them? The factory filled with enemies including a 6-foot tall giant with an automatic shotgun and a sledgehammer who is just waiting for you to check a guide? Don't worry little one, I will show you the ways of old.

Whether intentionally or not, Escape from Tarkov is a power fantasy where the players with the knowledge and better gear have an advantage. Technically any player can kill any other, a single 9mm bullet to the face will take care of pretty much every issue, but as more experienced players have every possible advantage, it's a digital meritocracy that has replicated the problems inherent in the system.

Despite my enthusiasm for Escape from Tarkov, this 1.0 review isn't what I was hoping for. I wanted the full release to be the capstone update that completes the game that made extraction shooters happen. Instead, it feels like an incremental update that has quietly axed many of developer BattleState Games' plans for the game. Several skills promised to come in the final addition have never materialized, and promised maps have been cut back too.

Escape from Tarkov review

(Image credit: Battlestate Games)

The desire to get high-value loot will force you to make stupid choices

The 1.0 update brings a huge visual overhaul to the game's Interchange map, and there's a heap of extra content in the form of a story mode and a ton of different guns. Yet performance is spottier, and I've noticed the game crashing more – outside of some slowdown there hasn't been much to hinder my enjoyment, but it is annoying that the "final" version of the game rarely feels like it.

The most baffling inclusion in the 1.0 release is the ability to visit the traders and talk to them in their own habitat. This means the tiny little profile pictures that players have been gazing at for years have been given life, but you'll only actually go to talk to them when you need to see them for one of the story quests that were also added in the final release.

Because you can only do these quests by talking to the traders in their 3D spaces – while others can be turned in via a menu – it just feels confusing and unnecessary. The result is two functionally different quest systems that work differently and don't cross over. This is Escape from Tarkov's big 1.0 addition and it's a dud. Luckily, it's backed up by a game that's already phenomenal.

Escape from Tarkov review

(Image credit: Battlestate Games)

There is a slight elephant in the room in that, despite the fact they look the same and technically are the same game, the PvE and PvP versions of Tarkov are different animals.PvP, the version of Tarkov you get by buying the game outright, fills each map with a combination of AI enemies and real-life players. There's a real joy to be found in outsmarting other players, although Escape from Tarkov's steep learning curve means you're likely to spend a lot of your time getting blasted from weird angles.

Escape from Tarkov's DLC PvE mode is a bit slower and more meditative. The shootouts are just as intense but the PMC characters – which are usually played by other real players in the base game – are controlled by AI, with a random selection of equipment and loot. These PMCs seem to flank and push smartly in 1.0, but any AI in Escape from Tarkov can quickly take you out if you're not careful.This version of Tarkov, a mode that I migrated to myself about six months ago with the launch of Escape from Tarkov's "hardcore wipe" and found fits my 36-year-old reflexes a little better.

Screenshot from Escape from Tarkov showing lush greenery and two soldiers.

(Image credit: Battlestate Games)

You lose the dizzying high of outsmarting a player and taking his stuff, but it's easier to play and doesn't require you to sacrifice your whole life to the arms race that typifies Escape from Tarkov's PvP experience. The player-base is split over which version is better, but having spent 100s of hours in each, I think it's really down to personal preference.

However you choose to play it, Escape from Tarkov is ultimately a game about kicking over sandcastles. Embrace this – the highs and lows of killing other players to take their stuff and then being killed by other players so they can take your stuff – and you'll have fun. This is the promise all extraction shooters offer, but it's distilled to its purest form here, an extraction shooter that will make you truly miserable if you let it, but can offer dizzying highs you won't find elsewhere.Escape from Tarkov's 1.0 release is a slight disappointment, but the core that makes it shine is intact and worth the time of any FPS fan curious to try it out for themselves.

Disclaimer

Escape from Tarkov was reviewed on PC, with a code provided by the publisher.

Escape from Tarkov: Price ComparisonView Similar Amazon USAmazon No price informationCheck AmazonWalmart - View SimilarWalmart No price informationCheck WalmartWe check over 250 million products every day for the best pricespowered by Gamesradar CATEGORIES PS5 Xbox Series X PC Gaming Platforms PlayStation Xbox Jake Tucker

Jake is the editorial director for the PC Gaming Show and a lifelong fan of shooters and turn-based strategy. He's best known for launching NME's gaming site and eating three quarter pounders in one sitting that one time.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.

Logout Read more A distant flare illuminates the sky in Arc Raiders Arc Raiders review: "The most memorable multiplayer experiences I've had all year – this shooter is tense but wonderfully approachable"    Arc Raiders survivors in metal and fabric armor Arc Raiders gives Escape from Tarkov a run for its money, and the secret is making the shooter feel like an RPG that you can "almost play as a single-player game"    Claptrap from Borderlands 4 raising his arms in front of a banner that says "Welcom Recurits" Borderlands 4 review: "Undeniably an excellent looter shooter, but one that requires a bit of tunnel vision to fully enjoy"    Escape From Tarkov After 9 years, Escape From Tarkov version 1.0 arrives on Steam full of bugs with obscene matchmaking queues: "I've played 11 hours that recorded on Steam. But I haven't entered the game yet"    Selene stands in front of lots of cracked space suit helmets much like her own in the key art for Returnal, with the PS5 5 year anniversary tag on the left I'm still obsessed with one of the PS5's best-kept secrets: Returnal is a twitchy roguelike shooter in a sci-fi nightmare that won't get out of my head    Arc Raiders best weapons Arc Raiders has made me fall in love with getting my ass kicked by giant robots    Latest in FPS Games Splitgate 2 5 months after a launch so bad it was un-released and put back into beta, Splitgate 2 tries again as devs insist the FPS is now in "the best place it's ever been"    Battlefield 6 multiplayer screenshot At the cost of his "sanity," Battlefield 6 player hits max rank with what is by far the worst vehicle in the game, sagely concludes: "It's a bad vehicle"    Key art for Marathon showing a colorful cybernetic character with a gun taking cover Presumably praying people have room for another extraction shooter after Arc Raiders, Bungie opens Marathon signups for December playtest    Battlefield 6 Battlefield 6 lead says recoil will be "100% fixed," but "it's a pretty complex issue" that'll take some time to resolve: "We're already cooking some improvements"    Half-Life 2 Ex Valve designer reveals the door and big toe that retroactively broke Half-Life 2: "This isn't a normal bug - it appears to have traveled backwards in time and infected the original!"    Call of Duty Black Ops 7 lin wei operator holding M15 mod 0 Best Black Ops 7 M15 Mod 0 build and loadout    Latest in Reviews Escape from Tarkov review Escape from Tarkov review: "An extraction shooter that will make you truly miserable if you let it, but can offer dizzying highs you won't find elsewhere"    Brass: Birmingham box showing a puddle in a cobbled street, against a plain white wall Fans think this is the best strategy board game ever made, and I have to admit that they've got a point    Josh O'Connor and Daniel Craig in Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery review: "Brings Knives Out back to its roots for a sequel that's almost on a par with the original"    Key art showing Constance with a paintbrush on a background of brushstrokes Constance review: "If Hollow Knight: Silksong seems too daunting, this wonderful paint powered adventure should do nicely"    The Mysterium box on a wooden surface, seen from above This enthralling team board game is perfect for playing with family this Thanksgiving    Kirby Air Riders key art showing Kirby blazing along on a warp star as spear waddle dee and metaknight are ahead Kirby Air Riders review: "This racer is also equal parts fighting game, minigame collection, and roguelike – and I'm shocked at how well that works"    GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS