Love Death + Robots: In Vaulted Hall Entombed (2022) – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
In a short so good you wish you were playing it, In Vaulted Halls Entombed feels like a series of cut scenes from a AAA game.
In a short so good you wish you were playing it, In Vaulted Halls Entombed feels like a series of cut scenes from a AAA game.
Swarm is one of the first from Volume III which pushes you to want a sequel if/when we get a volume IV.
Government soldiers face off against a mecha bear that has killed dozens without mercy.
Thanks to bad timing, two astronauts get stuck on one of Jupiter’s moons.
All Through the House presents the idea Santa’s Little Helpers may not be cuddly and friendly reindeer, and naughty kids may not just deal with coal.
You may feel like you’re getting flashbacks from In The Tall Grass, while watching The Tall Grass, but it’s not the same and gets out before it can get bad.
So, what video game were these cut scenes from, when is it out, and for what platforms?
Imagine living in a world where you could live forever if you forego having children. Is this a tradeoff you could accept? Especially knowing the price to pay if you had kids?
Two brothers, separated by one having modifications and the other not, have a night out where they bond and could potentially lose their lives.
The Dump keeps up the weird vibe of the rest of the anthology but decides it wants to get a bit rustic, and not in a farm life kind of way.
Good Hunting will likely be one of your favorite shorts to come out of the Love, Death + Robots anthology.
Beyond the Aquila Rift may feel like it cut the bulk of a larger story, but the way it makes you fiend for details is part of the sell.
Sucker of Souls is quite gory and a tad bit comical. However, it is towards the bottom of the Love, Death & Robots ranking.
Cartoon graphics mix with life or death situations creating moments that make you hold your breath in Suits.
Three Robots is a quirky short which ends just before it could perhaps go left and overstay its welcome.
Sonnie’s Edge, thanks to its protagonist, the monster fights, and what background we get, makes you clamor for more.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.
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