Out of This World was the band's follow up album to the successful album
The Final Countdown, but it did not match the success of its predecessor. Upon its release in August 1988,
Out of This World peaked at No. 19 on the
Billboard 200 album chart. platinum status in Switzerland and gold in Canada.
Out of This World included the hit singles "
Superstitious", "
Open Your Heart" and "Let the Good Times Rock", all of which had accompanying
music videos. "Superstitious" was released in the fall of 1988 and became arguably the band's most recognizable song from the album. Its music video received heavy airplay on music television. Reviewing the album,
AllMusic contributor Andy Hinds writes that "Europe produces made-to-order lite metal with admirable craftsmanship and occasionally memorable hooks. "Superstitious" even has a disarming gospel quality. This is hard rock with all the edges sanded off. Capable lead singer Joey Tempest carries the tunes with nonthreatening panache, while Kee Marcello (who proved his virtuosity on Europe's previous by performing "Flight of the Bumblebee") provides plenty of nice guitar solos." Paul Elliott of
Classic Rock considers
Out of This World "the strongest" of the two follow-up albums to the highly successful
The Final Countdown and "Superstitious" "arguably Europe's greatest ever song". Tim Jones of
Record Collector is even more enthusiastic, defining the album "a stratospheric set of a dozen imperious rockers." On the contrary, Canadian journalist
Martin Popoff wrote a bad review of the album, comparing it to "an offensive pop rock outing, much closer to early
Warrant ... than
The Final Countdown could or would dare" and calling Europe "a dunce-cap posse solidly in search of cash and chicks, egregiously removed from any sort of hard rock acumen." ==Out of This World Tour==