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Capcom just dropped Pragmata, a fresh sci-fi action-shooter that blends real-time hacking puzzles with satisfying gunplay on the Moon. Released April 17, 2026, on PS5, Xbox Series X/S, Switch 2, and PC, it clocks in at roughly 12 hours for the story with another 3-4 hours for full completionist runs.
This is no bloated open-world slog. Pragmata keeps things tight, linear, and laser-focused on its core loop. The result? One of the most engaging new IPs of 2026 so far, with review aggregates hitting 85-88 across Metacritic and OpenCritic. Early GOTY chatter is already loud.
You play as Hugh, the last surviving astronaut after a rogue AI turns the Moon's massive 3D-printed space station against the crew. Enter Diana, a mysterious humanoid robot girl who becomes your hacking partner and emotional anchor.
The story leans into classic sci-fi tropes: rogue AI, fabricated realities, and a budding father-daughter dynamic. It won't rewrite the genre, but the charming interactions between Hugh and Diana deliver genuine heart. Finding REMs (real-world object recreations) and watching Diana discover crayons or toys hits surprisingly sweet notes.
"Hugh and Diana are a wonderful pair, and each nearly steals the show from one another."
- Analog Stick Gaming
Data logs and holograms flesh out the corporate Moon base backstory, though key Diana revelations sometimes hide in optional pads instead of main dialogue.
The star is the real-time hacking system. Aim down sights and a grid puzzle overlays the screen. Draw paths with face buttons to expose enemy weak points. More blue "open" spaces extend vulnerability time. Random yellow Nodes add effects like chain hacks, damage boosts, or robot infighting.
Tougher foes and bosses complicate the grid with obstacles and sabotage. You juggle dodging attacks, keeping enemies in view, and solving the puzzle fast. It sounds chaotic. It feels brilliant once it clicks.
Shooting backs it up with weighty feedback. The shotgun and charge rifle pop weak spots satisfyingly. Grenade launcher clears packs. Stasis net buys breathing room. The auto rifle brings recoil-heavy chaos once unlocked. Heat buildup forces smart weapon swaps and scavenging.
Stagger meters lead to flashy executions with big damage numbers and camera cuts. Boss fights dwarf you with unique patterns that twist the hacking grid for spectacle.
Simulation missions at the hideout hub test specific skills and enemy quirks without derailing the main campaign. Minor control quirks pop up in optional platforming, but they rarely frustrate the core experience.
Weapons and upgrades encourage experimentation while letting you settle into favorites. Level design mixes tight corridors with arena fights in predictable but effective rhythm. Collectibles and hidden paths reward exploration without padding runtime.
Some late-game arenas feel repetitive, and the overarching plot stays surface-level compared to the character moments. Yet the action is so compelling that most players push through to 100% completion anyway.
Reviews praise the innovative hack-and-shoot formula and emotional core:
OpenCritic sits at 87-88 with 94% recommended. Metacritic around 85. Capcom's streak continues after Resident Evil Requiem and Monster Hunter Wilds.
Community reactions on Reddit and X echo the love. Players who tried the demo are buying day one. Many call it a "video game-ass video game" — straightforward, focused fun that recalls 360-era charm with modern polish.
Pragmata is Capcom proving they can still launch risky new IPs that stick the landing. The hack-and-shoot combat is genuinely original and ridiculously satisfying. Hugh and Diana give the story soul without overreaching. At 12-16 hours, it respects your time while leaving you wanting more of this duo.
If you crave tight action with a clever twist, buy it. This is the kind of focused single-player experience the industry needs more of in 2026. Capcom didn't need to swing this hard after their recent hits. They did anyway, and it paid off.
Pragmata isn't perfect, but its highs are so high that the minor gripes barely register. Load up, aim, hack, shoot, and enjoy one of the most fun new games of the year. Here's hoping we see these characters again soon.




