Sable
OpenCritic Rating
Top Critic Average
Critics Recommend
Sable Trailers
Sable - Summer Trailer - E3 2021
A Glimpse of Sable (new gameplay footage)
Sable - E3 2018 Announcement Trailer
Critic Reviews for Sable
These issues are unfortunate because Sable is a remarkable game that would normally warrant a higher rating. But the problems, although minor for the most part, were encountered with such regularity that they can’t be overlooked. Hopefully, Raw Fury will fix these hiccups quickly because, without those flaws, Sable truly is a beautiful and minimalist journey through an open world that is a joy to explore.
Sable's lonely, heartfelt journey of self-discovery will sit with me for a lifetime.
Pick a direction and wander off to get the most out of this mesmerising game of exploration.
Sable is a beautiful, minimalist voyage that's hindered by bugs and bland puzzles.
When everything clicks, Sable is a great game. Once you've got your head around a quest, especially a longer one with a few moving parts, you can get lost in the world climbing buildings, finding secrets, unlocking puzzles, and gathering knick-knacks. Unfortunately, the game leaves you to your own devices far too often, and doesn't present an interesting enough world for you to want to get lost in it. I'd say at least I could enjoy flying around in it, but after my hovercraft conked out, I didn't even have that. It cares too much about how it wants to make you feel and not enough about how it's going to get you there.
A stunning visual style can't hide the fact that Sable is not only uninterested in guiding its players but it doesn't really care about entertaining them either.
Sable is downright beautiful in its execution and storytelling, and captures an innate desire for exploration like few other open-world games.
Self-guided exploration is bolstered by quests that give you an excuse to jump on a speeder, climb mountains, and float through unexplained ruins in a dazzling ecosystem