Samuel Taylor
- Oxenfree
- TimeSplitters 2
- Fallout: New Vegas
Samuel Taylor's Reviews
A rocky start shows a promising adventure. Please don't mess up, DONTNOD.
A really confusing title that struggles to find an audience.
A bloody terrifying horror game hiding within the shell of an admittedly broken experience.
A quirky horror title that's too big for its own boots.
One of the most boring, insipid horror games you'll ever play.
Darkest Dungeon manages to make turn-based combat terrifying for entirely different reasons.
A neat little package of RTS goodness.
A botched port doesn't change the fact that Anodyne is worth a shot, with it being a really well done surrealist title.
Dangerously overpriced surrealist horror.
The king of battle royale has fallen victim to regicide.
A great gateway title for roguelikes, and a great game on its own rights.
A rather humdrum, err, Hyper Light Drifter clone, that falls just short of being one of the best RPGs of 2018.
A weird title. It's not an overwhelmingly good walking simulator, it's not an outrageously bad exploration game, it's just... there.
It's Captain Planet meets Inside. You can't go wrong with a combination like that, surely.
One of the more fun experiments to test, with a sublime world to explore, and less-than-sublime gameplay attached.
Whatever promise Sea of Thieves had at the beginning falters soon after, to the point where this is a hot contender for The Most Boring Game of 2018.
A puzzler more interested in its own cerebral thoughts than player enjoyment, Q.U.B.E. 2 is a vastly underwhelming title that is only saved by its gorgeous visuals.
An interesting experiment game that is currently near-impossible, and is in desperate need of a few tweaks.
The first-time attempt to make Dynasty Warriors open-world is valiant, yet ultimately makes the entire game lifeless.
One of the best platformers you'll ever play. The story is also equally superb.