Games:
IGN: It’s not often the final game in a series... sticks the landing quite like Life is Strange: Reunion.
The Guardian: Reunion zeroes in on the best things about this series.
Gamerant: Life is Strange: Reunion is a heartfelt story that deserves to be told.
But Why Tho: If you choose to have Chloe and Max rekindle their love, you are in for one of the best-written romances in gaming.
GameSpot: The game's writing is, without question, its greatest strength. You'll laugh out loud at everything from snappy comebacks to humorously penned datapad entries.
Plays:
Washington City Paper: Sing to Me Now reaches into your guts and invisibly rearranges things with a gentle hand. You leave the performance feeling better connected to humanity, with a few tears sparkling in your eyes. A river of wisdom, this play believes strongly that people can be saved.
The Washington Post: Dauterman fruitfully mashes up humanity and divinity in this offbeat quest.
DC Theatre Scene: At its heart, Sing To Me Now grapples with a lot of weighty topics, including what the role of art is in a cruel, chaotic world... And like the best of art, what it offers is not so much clear answers as the hope we need to keep going, keep fighting, even after we leave the theater.
Theatre is Easy: Even as all of the characters’ dreams and expectations fall apart, Dauterman’s dark humor also brings a kind of optimism to the show. She has a beautiful way of shedding a warm light on even her characters’ darkest flaws.
Single White Fringe Geek: It’s an enormous relief when something turns out to be just as great as you hoped it was going to be. Iris Dauterman's script Sing to Me Now is easily the best new play I’ve read in the last ten years.