Brian Seymour
- Hollow Knight
- Rain World
- Celeste
Brian Seymour's Reviews
Appetizing gameplay and hilarious themes make for a tasty meal.
Crash Bandicoot 4: It’s About Time finds a comfortable place amongst the franchise’s finest.
An almost flawless genre-spanning game that is only slightly held back by some predictable story beats.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Cowabunga Collection is a great ensemble for retro gamers and newcomers alike.
Ori and the Will of the Wisps maintains the same compelling ethos as its prequel. Major changes to the series most tedious and most unique are for better and for worst.
A great stepping stone into a difficult genre.
You’ll play for the addicting bullet hell action but stay for complexities beneath its surface. Just don’t pull your hair out along the way.
Monster Camp embraces everything that made its predecessor so wildly charming.
Loop Hero is an addictive and complex game that changes what it means to be on the grind. A few ambiguities hinder the experience, but that doesn’t stop it from being an overall innovative and fantastic game.
More of Remedy’s fantastic worldbuilding with some combat hiccups.
Less-than-decent gameplay nearly spoils a quality narrative.
AWE feels less like the beginning of some grand interconnected universe and more like a tacked-on reference to Remedy’s previous work.
Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity fails to deliver any meaningful fantasy through its story or its gameplay.
Players beware: Clown in a House is somewhat depressing with an almost one-dimensional tone.
Headbangers: Rhythm Royale is a cute and light-hearted experience albeit a short-lived one as you’ll inevitably find something better to do.
A basic 3-D puzzler that grows stale despite a relatively short playtime.
Hellbound is more imitation than inspiration. Lacking in originality and flair with merely passable gameplay, it makes us wonder why we shouldn’t just play Doom.
A lacking homage to decidedly better content.
An old game relying on old conventions is easily forgiven and forgotten. Asha in Monster World has no such excuse.
If you were the person to put this game down because it’s an endless slog, then it’s probably not worth the steep price tag.