- Serious Sam 3: Jewel Of The Nile Princess
- Serious Sam 3: Jewel Of The Nile Movie
- Serious Sam 3: Jewel Of The Nile River
- Serious Sam 3: Jewel Of The Nile Land
- Serious Sam 3 Jewel Of The Nile Review
- Serious Sam 3 Jewel Of The Nile Final Boss
- Serious Sam 3 Jewel Of The Nile Download
Serious Sam 3: BFE | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Croteam |
Publisher(s) | Devolver Digital |
Director(s) | |
Designer(s) |
|
Programmer(s) | Alen Ladavac |
Artist(s) | Davor Hunski |
Writer(s) | Alen Ladavac |
Composer(s) | Damjan Mravunac |
Series | Serious Sam |
Platform(s) | |
Release |
|
Genre(s) | First-person shooter |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
The Jewel of the Nile is DLC for Serious Sam 3: BFE. It is available for the PC, Linux, Mac, and Xbox 360 versions of the game. It costs $9.99 USD on PC, Linux, and Mac. It costs $2.49 USD for Xbox Live Gold members, and $9.99 for non-Gold members.
Serious Sam 3: Jewel Of The Nile Princess
- Serious Sam 3: BFE Deluxe Edition + Jewel of Nile (DLC) v3.0.3.0 MULTI5/RUSSIAN Fixed Files; Serious Sam 3: BFE v3.0 MULTI5/RUSSIAN Fixed Files; Game Trainers & Unlockers: Serious Sam 3: BFE v3.0.3.0.261096 +11 TRAINER; Serious Sam 3: BFE v20161229 +3 TRAINER; Serious Sam 3: BFE v3.0.3.0 b249955 +6 TRAINER; Serious Sam 3: BFE v3.0.3.0 +4.
- Serious Sam 3 DLC Jewel of the Nile coming in October. Includes three new missions.
Serious Sam 3: BFE is a first-person shootervideo game developed by Croatia-based indie development studio Croteam and published by Devolver Digital. It is part of the Serious Sam series and the prequel to the 2001 video game, Serious Sam. The game takes place in 22nd-century Egypt, during Mental's invasion on Earth, as implied in The First Encounter. The game features a 16-player online, as well as 4-player splitscreen co-op campaign mode. The game was first released for Microsoft Windows on 22 November 2011.[3] The OS X support for the game followed shortly after and was released on 23 April 2012.[4] The Linux version of the game started being worked on after a high number of requests, where the first Linux-related update was the porting of the game's dedicated server.[5] The game itself, however, was released one day after Valve opened the beta branch for 'Steam for Linux', namely 20 December 2012.[6]
Serious Sam 3: BFE. All Discussions Screenshots Artwork Broadcasts Videos Workshop News Guides Reviews. Level 3 (Jewel of the Nile) - Born Again 6 Comments. Serious Sam 3 Jewel of the Nile Walkthrough Videos (Completed) Total number of 3 videos by gamermaxchannel (01:47:38) Title: Duration: Date: Serious Sam 3 Jewel of the Nile Part 1 (00:32:30) May.
Gameplay[edit]
Like previous titles in the series, Serious Sam 3: BFE involves fighting against many hordes of enemies in wide-open environments. However Serious Sam 3 has more closed environments than its predecessors, particularly in the early levels. There are also a larger number of enemies that can attack the player from a distance.
The player can carry an unlimited number of weapons, including a minigun, rocket launcher, assault rifle and a cannon. There are 13 weapons in total, five of which have a manual reload. The signature close-combat weapons from the first game, the knife and chainsaw, have been replaced with a sledgehammer with three modes of attack (vertical strike, 180 turn and full 360 turn).
There is no regenerating health, instead there are health and armor power-ups scattered throughout the levels that the player must pick up. Additionally, the levels are full of secret areas, where health, armor, ammo and in some cases, weapons from later levels can be found, following the tradition of the previous games. Some weapons such as the Lasergun and the Sniper Rifle and their respective ammunition pickups are in fact secret-only, and otherwise are not found in the levels normally. There are no puzzles, however the player must find keys, pull levers and find environmental anomalies to progress.
Classic enemies such as the Beheaded Kamikaze, Beheaded Rocketeer and Kleer Skeleton return in the game. New ones include the Khnum and Scrapjack (resembling the Hell Knight and Mancubus from Doom, respectively), as well as the cloned soldiers reminiscent of the Strogg from the Quake series. The Kamikaze has returned to his original design, rather than the Serious Sam II design. The Gnaar's design has radically been changed from the original game. It is now much larger, differently shaped and walks on all fours, unlike its bipedal counterpart in Serious Sam.
Serious Sam 3 features some new gameplay mechanics such as sprinting and iron sights. Unlike most other FPS games that have sprinting, you are able to sprint as much as you want, but cannot attack while sprinting. The pistol and assault rifle have the ability to aim down sights, which increases accuracy but only slightly. The player moves slower while aiming down the sight, making it impractical at close range. The player can perform hand kills or kick enemies to conserve ammo, depending on the weapon selected. For example, a Gnaar's eyeball can be ripped out or an Antaresian Spider's shell can be broken.
Plot[edit]
Serious Sam 3: BFE serves as a prequel to the original Serious Sam: The First Encounter and depicts the events on Earth before Sam's journey into the past. Prior to AD 2060, humanity had slowly begun uncovering artifacts and ruins left behind in ancient times by the Sirians, the famous and long-thought extinct race from the place of Sirius. Unfortunately, Mental has chosen this time to turn his attention upon Earth. He dispatches his space fleet carrying his endless hordes to attack Earth, leading a three-year conquest that has humanity driven almost to the point of extinction. In a last-ditch effort, the survivors turn to the Time-Lock, a recently excavated device supposedly capable of granting a single person the ability of time travel via an inter-dimensional portal. Through it, that person could reach a pivotal point in time and alter events of the past. But as the device lies dormant, they must first discover a means to turn it on.
Sam 'Serious' Stone, part of the Earth Defense force, is dispatched with a detachment of soldiers in Alpha team to modern Egypt, which is occupied by Mental's alien army. Their original mission is to recon, rendezvous and extract Bravo team who are protecting Dr Stein, a scientist carrying hieroglyphics believed to contain instructions for powering up the Time-Lock. Sam's insertion goes haywire as his chopper is shot down and both teams are quickly wiped out. However, he is able to recover the hieroglyphics from Stein's phone in the museum and transmit them to headquarters. Deciphering indicates there is a hidden Sirian chamber below the Great Pyramid. Sam clears himself a path to a tunnel underneath the Sphinx and descends into the Pyramid. Night in the woods. He not only discovers the hidden chamber, but recovers crucial information and a bracelet device from the remains of what might have been Earth's last Sirian.
In order to power the Time-Lock, two dormant but incredibly powerful plasma-energy generators need to be activated. Hellfire from Charlie team inserts Sam to bring both online. This is slowly accomplished and Team Charlie is staged to enter the Time-Lock. Sam is relieved of duty and in the process of being extracted from Cairo, but is shot down once again and is forced to flee towards the lost ruins of Nubia. Traversing through more tombs, Sam gets back in touch with Hellfire and learns that Mental's forces have overrun the human military and killed them all shortly before dying herself. Now determined to finish what the Sirians has started, Sam vows to use the Time-Lock himself and kill Mental in the past before he can destroy humanity in the present. Sam then makes one last travel to Hatshepsut Temple, where the Time-Lock is located. The struggle to this destination ends with Sam killing Ugh-Zan IV, the father of Ugh-Zan III from Serious Sam: The First Encounter. With Ugh-Zan IV dead, the Time-Lock then activates, displaying an inter-dimensional portal to 3000 B.C., the timeline where the Sirians became extinct. Sam calls Mental on Stein's phone and is answered by Mental's daughter, Judy. She tells him that Mental is planning to 'moon' him. Sam notices the Moon plummeting rapidly within Earth's atmosphere and escapes through the Time-Lock to 3000 B.C. as the Moon impacts Earth, destroying the planet.
Copy protection[edit]
The game features SteamworksDRM and a complex system of custom checks as part of its copy protection system. If the game code detects what it believes to be an unauthorised copy, it alters gameplay to make play exceedingly difficult. An invincible arachnoid is spawned: this creature can charge at high speed, melee attack, and attacks from a range with twin chainguns.[7]
Marketing and release[edit]
Indie games[edit]
Before the release of Serious Sam 3: BFE, three indie games were announced to be in development. All were released around the time of Serious Sam 3's release.
- Serious Sam Double D - A side-scroller platforming game featuring an ability to wield multiple weapons at a time.
- Serious Sam: Kamikaze Attack! - An Android and iOS 2D-game that allows player to direct and control Beheaded Kamikaze.
- Serious Sam: The Random Encounter - An action role-playing game with simplified graphics.
Gold Edition[edit]
Halloween solitaire free download. The Gold Edition of Serious Sam 3: BFE includes:
- The main game
- The 'Jewel of the Nile' expansion pack
- The Bonus Pack, which consists of:
- The original soundtrack of the game composed by Damjan Mravunac and Filip Brtan in AAC, FLAC and WMA formats
- The 'Brett Sanderson Headless Kamikaze' skin for the 'Headless Kamikaze' multiplayer model
- A sniper scope for the single-player AS-24 'Devastator' weapon
- A making-of video of the game (in Croatian, with Englishsubtitles)
- A digital 42-page colored artwork album
- A digital copy of the game's box art
- High-resolution images of the game's posters
- High-resolution versions of the game's different trailers
Pre-orders[edit]
If the user pre-ordered Serious Sam 3: BFE, they received Devolver Digital's CFO Fork Parker as a model for the game's multiplayer mode.Additionally, if the user decided to pre-preorder the 'Serious Deluxe Edition', they received the Gold Edition, the Fork Parker model, golden skins for the Fork Parker and Serious Sam models and both classic Serious Sam titles, namely Serious Sam Classic: The First Encounter and Serious Sam Classic: The Second Encounter. On top, all deluxe pre-orderers were gifted a copy of Serious Sam Classics: Revolution, which released into Steam Early Access in late 2014.
Downloadable content[edit]
A downloadable content pack titled Jewel of the Nile was released for the PC and Mac versions of the game on 16 October 2012.[8] The DLC contains a new single-player campaign and competitive game modes for the game's multiplayer mode. New achievements are also included. Jewel of the Nile was released for Xbox 360 on 17 October 2012, together with the game itself.[9]
VR port[edit]
A virtual reality version of the game titled Serious Sam 3 VR was released on 9 November 2017.[10]
Reception[edit]
Reception | ||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Serious Sam 3: BFE has garnered mostly positive reviews. Eurogamer gave the game a 7 out of 10, praising it for what Duke Nukem Forever failed to deliver, however criticizing the redundancy of the title's gameplay compared to its previous iterations in the series.[14]Game Informer rewarded the game a score of 7.75 and praised the game for its graphics and the heavy metal score while being true to its original concept.[15]Destructoid gave it an 8.5, saying 'It's a lot of fun indeed. A lot of backbreaking, grueling, soul-destroying fun.'[13] Review aggregation website Metacritic gave the game a score of 72 out of 100 based on 53 reviews.[11]
References[edit]
- ^Wales, Matt. 'There's a Serious Sam Collection heading to Switch next week'. Eurogamer. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
- ^@SeriousSamIAm (11 November 2020). 'Because you Seriously wanted it! The Serious Sam Collection hits Nintendo Switch on November 17. Wishlist now! 💣 💥' (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^Rossignol, Jim (22 November 2011). 'And: Serious Sam 3 Is Out Later Today'. Rock Paper Shotgun. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
- ^'Serious Sam 3 Update Released - 'Support for Mac OSX added''. Steam. Valve. 23 April 2012. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
- ^'Serious Sam 3 Update Released - 'Dedicated server now works on Linux''. Steam. Valve. 23 April 2012. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
- ^'Steam for Linux Beta Now Available to All'. Steam. Valve. 19 December 2012. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
- ^Fletcher, JC (7 December 2011). 'The painful sting of Serious Sam 3's anti-piracy protection'. Engadget. AOL. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
- ^Hinkle, David (5 October 2012). ''Jewel of the Nile' DLC runs screaming to Serious Sam 3 on October 16'. Engadget. AOL. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
- ^Tyrrel, Brandin (4 November 2012). 'Serious Sam 3: BFE – Jewel of the Nile review (XBLA DLC)'. XBLA Fans. XBLA Fans. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
- ^https://www.roadtovr.com/croteam-serious-sam-3-vr-bfe-steam/
- ^ ab'Serious Sam 3: BFE for PC Reviews'. Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
- ^'Serious Sam 3: BFE for Xbox 360 Reviews'. Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
- ^ abSterling, Jim (25 November 2011). 'Review: Serious Sam 3: BFE'. Destructoid. ModernMethod. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
- ^ abWhitehead, Dan (24 November 2011). 'Serious Sam 3: BFE Review - Blast from the past'. Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
- ^ abBiessener, Adam (23 November 2011). 'Serious Sam 3: BFE - No Frills, Some Thrills'. Game Informer. GameStop. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
- ^Watters, Chris (8 December 2011). 'Serious Sam 3: BFE Review - Crisp visuals and legions of enemies struggle to invigorate the lackluster Serious Sam 3: BFE'. GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
- ^Goble, Gord (1 December 2011). 'Serious Sam 3: BFE Review - Thought? Creativity? Not in Sam's blood-drenched retro world'. IGN. IGN Entertainment. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
External links[edit]
- Serious Sam 3: BFE on Croteam's website
- Serious Sam 3: BFE on Devolver Digital's website
Serious Sam 3: Jewel Of The Nile Movie
Seriously Expanded
HIGH Finally I get my hands on a laser cannon!
LOW The whole first level is just a mess.
WTF It's official: Any super-sized enemy can be a boss.
After Serious Sam 3:BFE's bizarre mistake setting half the game in narrow, urban locations, my hopes were not high for the franchise going forwards. In apparent reaction to the lukewarm reviews, Croteam has now delivered Serious Sam 3: Jewel of the Nile: a three-level expansion that tries to recreate some of the classic Serious Sam charm using their new engine. The player is taken through a wide variety of locations, reintroduced to a classic monster, and most importantly, the devs leave out most of what didn't work in Serious Sam 3.
The three levels vary wildly in quality. The first (centered on a small island) is simply a mess, asking the player to backtrack over and over again, picking up keys as new waves of enemies 'port in after each objective is completed. A nearly-identical level appeared in Serious Sam 3, and adding water around its borders doesn't magically improve its awful gameplay. Lisa: complete edition.
The second level is a huge improvement, offering some classic Serious Sam jumping puzzles after a brief (and thankfully non-labrynthine) jaunt through an urban area.
Serious Sam 3: Jewel Of The Nile River
The final level in the pack is absolutely great, being a classically-designed area full of monster-packed canyons, jetpacking, and a boss that turns Sam's own tools against him while impressively leveling the scenery in the process.
At times, Jewel of the Nile seems like an outright apologia to series fans for mistakes made in Serious Sam 3. Weren't able to find a laser cannon in Serious Sam 3? Jewel hands the player one as a reward for beating the first level. Couldn't stand the cave monkeys or the teleporting bulletproof psychic siren? The second is gone from the game, and the first barely appears! To top it all off, there's ample ammunition for every weapon in each of the areas, ensuring that all but the most pointlessly wasteful players will have the freedom to tackle their opposition in any way they see fit.
Despite their earlier misstep, this expansion was clearly made by people who understand the appeal of Serious Sam, and cared about giving fans of the series what they expected. Serious Sam 3: Jewel of the Nile goes a long way towards resurrecting the feel of the franchise that Serious Sam 3 was so sorely lacking, and I can only hope that this pack indicates that the developers have course-corrected, ensuring more bombastic and overwhelming Serious Sam games in years to come. Really, I'll be happy so long as I'm never asked to to sneak through another museum. That's Sly Cooper's job, not Sam Stone's. Rating: 7.5 out of 10.
Disclosures: This game was obtained via publisher and reviewed on the PC. Approximately four hours of play was devoted to single-player modes (completed one time).
Parents: The game is not rated by the ESRB, but contains blood and gore, language, violence, mature themes, partial nudity. Come on, don't even think about it. Exploding enemies at every turn, swearing, nude female enemies… this is everything you don't want your children playing in one handy package.
Deaf & Hard of Hearing: You will not be able to play this game. Full stop. The omnipresent Kamikazes and Bulls are only detectable by their approaching screams/hoofbeats, and if you don't know they're coming, they will destroy you. Even on the easiest difficulty level the lack of any visual cues to indicate off-screen attack imminence will prove a crippling, possibly insurmountable disadvantage.
Serious Sam 3: Jewel Of The Nile Land
VR port[edit]
A virtual reality version of the game titled Serious Sam 3 VR was released on 9 November 2017.[10]
Reception[edit]
Reception | ||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Serious Sam 3: BFE has garnered mostly positive reviews. Eurogamer gave the game a 7 out of 10, praising it for what Duke Nukem Forever failed to deliver, however criticizing the redundancy of the title's gameplay compared to its previous iterations in the series.[14]Game Informer rewarded the game a score of 7.75 and praised the game for its graphics and the heavy metal score while being true to its original concept.[15]Destructoid gave it an 8.5, saying 'It's a lot of fun indeed. A lot of backbreaking, grueling, soul-destroying fun.'[13] Review aggregation website Metacritic gave the game a score of 72 out of 100 based on 53 reviews.[11]
References[edit]
- ^Wales, Matt. 'There's a Serious Sam Collection heading to Switch next week'. Eurogamer. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
- ^@SeriousSamIAm (11 November 2020). 'Because you Seriously wanted it! The Serious Sam Collection hits Nintendo Switch on November 17. Wishlist now! 💣 💥' (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^Rossignol, Jim (22 November 2011). 'And: Serious Sam 3 Is Out Later Today'. Rock Paper Shotgun. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
- ^'Serious Sam 3 Update Released - 'Support for Mac OSX added''. Steam. Valve. 23 April 2012. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
- ^'Serious Sam 3 Update Released - 'Dedicated server now works on Linux''. Steam. Valve. 23 April 2012. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
- ^'Steam for Linux Beta Now Available to All'. Steam. Valve. 19 December 2012. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
- ^Fletcher, JC (7 December 2011). 'The painful sting of Serious Sam 3's anti-piracy protection'. Engadget. AOL. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
- ^Hinkle, David (5 October 2012). ''Jewel of the Nile' DLC runs screaming to Serious Sam 3 on October 16'. Engadget. AOL. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
- ^Tyrrel, Brandin (4 November 2012). 'Serious Sam 3: BFE – Jewel of the Nile review (XBLA DLC)'. XBLA Fans. XBLA Fans. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
- ^https://www.roadtovr.com/croteam-serious-sam-3-vr-bfe-steam/
- ^ ab'Serious Sam 3: BFE for PC Reviews'. Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
- ^'Serious Sam 3: BFE for Xbox 360 Reviews'. Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
- ^ abSterling, Jim (25 November 2011). 'Review: Serious Sam 3: BFE'. Destructoid. ModernMethod. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
- ^ abWhitehead, Dan (24 November 2011). 'Serious Sam 3: BFE Review - Blast from the past'. Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
- ^ abBiessener, Adam (23 November 2011). 'Serious Sam 3: BFE - No Frills, Some Thrills'. Game Informer. GameStop. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
- ^Watters, Chris (8 December 2011). 'Serious Sam 3: BFE Review - Crisp visuals and legions of enemies struggle to invigorate the lackluster Serious Sam 3: BFE'. GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
- ^Goble, Gord (1 December 2011). 'Serious Sam 3: BFE Review - Thought? Creativity? Not in Sam's blood-drenched retro world'. IGN. IGN Entertainment. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
External links[edit]
- Serious Sam 3: BFE on Croteam's website
- Serious Sam 3: BFE on Devolver Digital's website
Serious Sam 3: Jewel Of The Nile Movie
Seriously Expanded
HIGH Finally I get my hands on a laser cannon!
LOW The whole first level is just a mess.
WTF It's official: Any super-sized enemy can be a boss.
After Serious Sam 3:BFE's bizarre mistake setting half the game in narrow, urban locations, my hopes were not high for the franchise going forwards. In apparent reaction to the lukewarm reviews, Croteam has now delivered Serious Sam 3: Jewel of the Nile: a three-level expansion that tries to recreate some of the classic Serious Sam charm using their new engine. The player is taken through a wide variety of locations, reintroduced to a classic monster, and most importantly, the devs leave out most of what didn't work in Serious Sam 3.
The three levels vary wildly in quality. The first (centered on a small island) is simply a mess, asking the player to backtrack over and over again, picking up keys as new waves of enemies 'port in after each objective is completed. A nearly-identical level appeared in Serious Sam 3, and adding water around its borders doesn't magically improve its awful gameplay. Lisa: complete edition.
The second level is a huge improvement, offering some classic Serious Sam jumping puzzles after a brief (and thankfully non-labrynthine) jaunt through an urban area.
Serious Sam 3: Jewel Of The Nile River
The final level in the pack is absolutely great, being a classically-designed area full of monster-packed canyons, jetpacking, and a boss that turns Sam's own tools against him while impressively leveling the scenery in the process.
At times, Jewel of the Nile seems like an outright apologia to series fans for mistakes made in Serious Sam 3. Weren't able to find a laser cannon in Serious Sam 3? Jewel hands the player one as a reward for beating the first level. Couldn't stand the cave monkeys or the teleporting bulletproof psychic siren? The second is gone from the game, and the first barely appears! To top it all off, there's ample ammunition for every weapon in each of the areas, ensuring that all but the most pointlessly wasteful players will have the freedom to tackle their opposition in any way they see fit.
Despite their earlier misstep, this expansion was clearly made by people who understand the appeal of Serious Sam, and cared about giving fans of the series what they expected. Serious Sam 3: Jewel of the Nile goes a long way towards resurrecting the feel of the franchise that Serious Sam 3 was so sorely lacking, and I can only hope that this pack indicates that the developers have course-corrected, ensuring more bombastic and overwhelming Serious Sam games in years to come. Really, I'll be happy so long as I'm never asked to to sneak through another museum. That's Sly Cooper's job, not Sam Stone's. Rating: 7.5 out of 10.
Disclosures: This game was obtained via publisher and reviewed on the PC. Approximately four hours of play was devoted to single-player modes (completed one time).
Parents: The game is not rated by the ESRB, but contains blood and gore, language, violence, mature themes, partial nudity. Come on, don't even think about it. Exploding enemies at every turn, swearing, nude female enemies… this is everything you don't want your children playing in one handy package.
Deaf & Hard of Hearing: You will not be able to play this game. Full stop. The omnipresent Kamikazes and Bulls are only detectable by their approaching screams/hoofbeats, and if you don't know they're coming, they will destroy you. Even on the easiest difficulty level the lack of any visual cues to indicate off-screen attack imminence will prove a crippling, possibly insurmountable disadvantage.
Serious Sam 3: Jewel Of The Nile Land
Daniel Weissenberger
Serious Sam 3 Jewel Of The Nile Review
Nothing relevant to this conversation, that's for sure! Because we're here to talk about (sorry, write and read about, respectively) GC_Danny, who's updating this profile for the first time in thirteen years!
So let's take a gander back at that time and see what's happened! In addition to writing hundreds of video game reviews, Dan produced a book that can be legally purchased by almost anyone! He also wrote two short films, two episodes of television, and two movies! Although, sadly, and through much fault of his own, the movies have yet to be released.
In addition to general game reviewing, he's also dabbled in more long-form work, writing some of the longest and most comprehensivegamereviews of all time. Then there's his non-GameCritics blogging, where he's famous as the world's foremost expert on the TV show Criminal Minds, as well as the co-host of a weekly podcast - he's even working on a new videogame/critical experiment, which you can find out more about here!
If all that wasn't enough, just a few months ago he rebranded himself as 'The Hidden Object Guru', hoping to stake another claim of ultimate expertise, this time over a genre of casual games! Will he be successful? Only time will tell, but you're free to join the thrilling ride at his YouTube channel!
Serious Sam 3 Jewel Of The Nile Final Boss
Latest posts by Daniel Weissenberger (see all)
Serious Sam 3 Jewel Of The Nile Download
- Bugsnax Review - December 12, 2020
- Yakuza: Like A Dragon Review - December 8, 2020
- Star Renegades Review - December 7, 2020