Samuel Taylor
- Oxenfree
- TimeSplitters 2
- Fallout: New Vegas
Samuel Taylor's Reviews
Dangerously overpriced surrealist horror.
An overblown Fallout 4 mod that's overpriced and buggy, yet still houses an enjoyable experience inside.
A quirky horror title that's too big for its own boots.
The worst Call of Duty in years, but the best World War II game in recent memory.
A bloody terrifying horror game hiding within the shell of an admittedly broken experience.
It has its moments, but the price of admission with Treasure Stack's warts-n-all presentation might steer a few players away from the genuine genius this game provides.
A rocky start shows a promising adventure. Please don't mess up, DONTNOD.
Utterly terrifying and pants-wetting horror that must be experienced, even if the gameplay is a failure in most regards
Is Assault Android fun? Yes, an almost illegal amount of fun, but it makes severe missteps near the end, and the journey ends before you can even appreciate what happens.
A botched port doesn't change the fact that Anodyne is worth a shot, with it being a really well done surrealist title.
It's Captain Planet meets Inside. You can't go wrong with a combination like that, surely.
A neat little package of RTS goodness.
One of the more fun experiments to test, with a sublime world to explore, and less-than-sublime gameplay attached.
It's not the biggest rip-off in the world, and Vaporum's neat little spins on dungeon crawling are respectable, with the combat being tactical and in-depth, and the story not being as rewarding as you'd think.
An understated and fun little survival simulator that is mostly well-balanced, and a small treat to play.
A really neat mix of mechanics and style leads Monster Energy Supercross 2 to be one of the strongest Motocross titles around.
Whatever missteps Ashen makes can be mostly overlooked, save for the worlds rarely unforgiving nature. This was a journey that enticed me from start to finish, and I pray to The Lord Bruce Lee that it'll do the same to you.
A great gateway title for roguelikes, and a great game on its own rights.
Darkest Dungeon manages to make turn-based combat terrifying for entirely different reasons.
While it might not be up to the same kookiness of previous titles from SWERY, The MISSING has other reasons to make you stay, leaving you shook and heart-broken with a stop-start narrative, and an gameplay gimmick that doesn't overstay its welcome.