Metascore
72

Generally favorable reviews - based on 5 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 4 out of 5
  2. Negative: 0 out of 5
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  1. Mar 14, 2025
    70
    If there’s a critique to be made, it’s that All Worlds sometimes feels like a victory for a race that very few people ever saw. But maybe that’s the point, and the lads just did it for themselves? Like the Golden Record, it’s less about delivering a neatly packaged message and more about sending something out there.
  2. The Wire
    Mar 11, 2025
    70
    A lot of All Worlds could be bundled onto daytime radio playlists without standing out too starkly. .... Echoes of these acts’ more severe youthful excursions shines through on “Akkadian” – an audacious combo of jungle breaks and coldwave verses – and “Dummy”. [Apr 2025, p.55]
  3. Uncut
    Mar 11, 2025
    60
    It's more of a halfway house, with both acts' distinctive styles diluted as they server up '90s breakbeats ("Kokiri", "Fleece") and light industrial spoken-word pieces ("Nowhere"). Only the jangly promise of "passerine" sung by Emma Acs, hunts at a newish direction. [Mar 2025, p.35]
  4. Mar 11, 2025
    80
    Seamless yet challenging, All Worlds should appeal to Lust for Youth's more open-minded fans, but the new vistas it opens for the band are what make it exciting.
  5. Mar 11, 2025
    67
    Summer is a season of extremes—exhilaration and malaise, heat that can feel more oppressive than the cold—and All Worlds is best when it leans into them.

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