DC Worlds Collide is a turn-based RPG developed by Warner Bros. Here, you control your favourite character from the DC universe and fight against the evil group, the Crime Syndicate. The game was previously developed by Nuverse back in 2021 and later discontinued, before getting a revival under Warner Bros earlier this year. In this review, I have covered all the aspects of this game and some of the problems I faced as a player.
For this review, I played DC Worlds Collide on my Samsung S24 Ultra, and it ran smoothly. I have enjoyed the game to its maximum settings. After playing for over 20 hours, I have experienced almost every feature of the game and can provide a strong foundation for it.
For initial progress in the game, check out our Beginner’s guide, Gears guide, Diamonds farming guide, and Redeem codes articles. To choose the best heroes and master them, refer to our Heroes Tier List and Team Composition guides. In case you face any technical issues, the Customer Support guide for this game will provide you with certain assistance.
Fight the Crime Syndicate, the evil counterparts of your favorite DC heroes
Starting with the DC Worlds Collide review, the storyline goes like this: the Crime Syndicate, aka the evil versions of our beloved Justice League, have found a way to mess with the multiverse. They’re causing enough mayhem that even villains like Sinestro and Harley decide, “Yeah, nah, this is too much.”

Heroes and villains reluctantly team up to stop this power-hungry gang from wrecking the universe. Is it deep? Not really. Is it fun? Yeah, in the same way Fast & Furious movies are, you don’t need logic when there’s this much punching.
Outside the story campaign, you’ve got several game modes: Evil Falls, Crisis Watch, and the usual Tower-style challenge mode, Convergence. These modes keep things fresh, offering everything from brain-dead farming to intense tactical fights where you’ll swear your device is cheating. Some of the PvE content even has surprising difficulty spikes that’ll make you rethink your whole lineup.

PvP is more of a background flavor. You set your defense squad, challenge other players’ lineups, and earn rewards based on your ranking. It’s asynchronous, so don’t expect real-time sweat battles, but it’s a decent side hustle for premium currency.
Get stuck in a Gameplay loop of Tap, Think, Regret, and Repeat
The gameplay is your classic turn-based team battle setup. You throw five characters into battle, ideally with some synergy, and let them do their thing. If you’re smart (or lucky), they survive. If not, you stare at the defeat screen, wondering why Bane died in round one despite being built like a brick wall.

Characters fall into roles: Tank, DPS, Support, and three traits: Mighty, Agile, and Tactical. Match them right, and you’re golden. Mix them wrong, and your team will collapse faster than my motivation to grind gear. And yes, there’s an Auto Battle feature. It’s not just helpful, it’s a lifestyle.
Sometimes I forget what manual gameplay looks like because I’m too busy multitasking while my team slaps enemies into oblivion on their own. That said, once you hit tougher stages, the auto system suddenly feels like Alfred is running it on vacation. You’re gonna have to step in.

Also, it’s not all sunshine. Some levels get way too hard out of nowhere. One minute you’re cruising, the next your entire team gets wrecked by a random laser crab boss, and you start Googling if your Zatanna is defective.
Character Collecting: Bless the RNG (or actually don’t)
Recruiting heroes in DC Worlds Collide is pure gacha madness. You spend Diamonds for a chance to pull your favorite DC characters, and most of the time… you’ll get someone you weren’t even rooting for. I had one week where I got three Green Arrows in a row. I don’t hate him, but I didn’t need a full archery club.

Still, the roster is great. You’ve got fan favorites like Superman, Wonder Woman, and The Flash, but also lesser-known characters like Scarecrow and Cheetah. The graphics and animations? Gorgeous. I won’t lie, I sometimes use ultimate attacks just to see the animation flex.
Watching Superman slam the ground like he’s trying to end Earth’s subscription is just a chef’s kiss. And then comes the real chaos: team building. There’s always room to experiment, whether you’re strategically stacking Tactical heroes for powerful skill synergies or just using your favorite characters for fun.

There’s a slight edge if you follow meta builds, sure, but off-meta squads can still be viable with the right setup. And that’s what I loved most, the feeling that my team, weird as it might be, could still get things done (eventually).
DC Worlds Collide visuals offer a treat for the franchise’s fans
Visually, DC Worlds Collide is a treat. The characters are distinct, the animations are slick, and every special move feels like it’s ripped from a comic panel. The 3D models are expressive, the lighting effects are punchy without being overkill, and the combat visuals never feel stale.

The music? Surprisingly solid. The orchestral scores during battles and ominous tones during story scenes give the game a cinematic vibe. But Voice acting? Where is that?! When there’s a dialogue in the game, the characters just become a mime character, like you had read the subtitles on the screen.
Controls are smooth and simple, but the UI falls behind
Let’s be real: the game looks slick. But the UI? It’s like a maze designed by Riddler. Way too many buttons, menus, submenus, and pop-ups. Sometimes I need a separate mini-map just to find the mission list. The Shop is buried behind three clicks, and don’t even get me started on navigating the hero enhancement screens.
Still, I’ve seen worse. And once you get used to it (or just stop caring), it becomes part of the charm. Like Gotham’s skyline: confusing but iconic. Controls during combat are simple and responsive. You won’t be doing frame-perfect inputs here, just tapping portraits and occasionally dragging for special skills. It gets the job done without fuss.
IAPs can be avoided only if you’re ready for a slow but endless grind
As a free-to-play title, DC Worlds Collide starts strong. You get login rewards, beginner banners, and a decent flow of premium currency (Diamonds) early on. The game throws enough freebies at you in the beginning to feel generous. But that generosity slows down faster than Reverse-Flash hitting a traffic jam.

Grinding becomes essential. Resource bottlenecks hit hard as you progress through stages and attempt to upgrade your main roster. The gacha system isn’t brutal, but neither is it forgiving. You’ll often need duplicates to rank up heroes, and those dupes are at the mercy of RNGesus.
It’s perfectly playable without spending, but you’ll need to make peace with slow progress and limited pulls. VIP bonuses, limited packs, and time-limited banners favor paying players. I stayed F2P and still had fun, but the temptation to spend is real. Real and shiny.
Final Verdict
DC Worlds Collide doesn’t reinvent the wheel, but it makes that wheel explode in a colorful, chaotic blast of capes and one-liners. It’s fun, it’s grindy, it’s occasionally rage-inducing, and it’s packed with enough content to keep you busy between your other daily mobile rituals.
I loved the character animations, the team variety, and the thrill of finally beating a boss that had smacked me silly for days. I didn’t love the grind walls, the weird menu design, or the RNG heartbreaks that had me questioning every decision I’ve ever made.
But would I keep playing it? Absolutely. And if you’re into DC, strategy-lite games, or just want to watch Harley Quinn launch a mallet at someone’s face in HD, give it a go. Just… don’t expect Batman to carry your whole squad. I tried. Didn’t end well.
DC Worlds Collide Review by GamingonPhone
Gameplay Mechanics - 7.5
Gamemodes and Progression - 7
Graphics and UI - 7.5
Controls and UI - 6.5
Free-to-Play Elements - 6.5
7
Average
DC Worlds Collide delivers a flashy, turn-based DC experience with a wild mix of heroes and villains, satisfying ultimates, and fun team-building. Don’t expect smooth menus or mercy from the gacha gods.
That’s all from us for the DC Worlds Collide Review! Did you find my DC Worlds Collide review helpful? Let me know in the comments below!
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