Samson: A Tyndalston Story Has Had Tons of Patches, But Is It Actually Fixed?

Releasing with a slate of technical issues, Samson has since undergone a process of transformation, with studio Liquid Swords delivering plentiful updates.

For a game about dealing with mounting pressure, Samson: A Tyndalston Story launched with a fair share of its own. Its release was mired by uneven polish, overly-familiar mission design, and a host of technical hiccups that were difficult to ignore.

But at its core lies something heartfelt: a gritty, tightly-focused undertaking where facing harsh, inescapable reality is the only route to survival.

Studio Liquid Swords acknowledged the game’s shortcomings on day one, admitting that performance issues were unacceptable before vowing to improve quality, gameplay, and content. While Samson McCray may be trapped in a downward spiral, the developers behind him are facing a different test – whether they can channel that pressure into meaningful change.

And they got off to a flying start, showing they’ve got the steel to earn their second chance. The first day after launch saw a sizeable update, focused on mending a suite of immersion-breaking problems. Performance and crashes were the most immediate concerns, accompanied by fixes for glitching animation, inconsistent AI behaviour, and malfunctioning saves.

Yet, even in moments when the game held together technically, mechanical friction persisted in that first update’s wake. Combat, while functional, was hampered by awkward camera work and limited readability, making encounters clumsy and disruptive rather than a defining feature. Missions followed familiar tropes, with an air of repetition dulling the game’s loop.

"Even in moments when the game held together technically, mechanical friction persisted in that first update’s wake."

Individually, these issues were manageable. As a collective, they made it impossible to see Samson for what it was trying to be. Underneath all those rough edges was a diamond; a game with a focused identity that was simply overshadowed by its shortcomings.

On a macro level, Samson: A Tyndalston Story is defined by pressure, the sum of its systems revolving around debt, daily quotas, and the constant threat from egregious power. It’s less about exploratory freedom and more about doing what you need to do to survive, setting it apart from more conventional open world design.

This tension isn’t for everyone. Indeed, the studio acknowledged as such in our recent interview; while some players embrace the urgency and momentum, others find it restrictive or even stressful. That divide, however, is precisely what needs preserving. See, in an increasingly risk-averse industry, Samson’s commitment to a finely-tuned, demanding structure is refreshing.

There are foundational elements which stand out; the city of Tyndalston itself, for example. It’s a dense, hostile, characterful setting, replete in atmosphere and detail. And those familiar, if underbaked systems – combat, missions, vehicular traversal – all serve a functional role within the larger environment. It is this existence of a solid blueprint that made Samson’s launch so frustrating. The ideas are there, and the game ostensibly works, but it didn’t feel good to play.

So, this begs the question why the game was released when it did. Surely a few more weeks in development wouldn’t have forced the studio to undergo a campaign of redemption. Well, the answer is found in external financial pressure. See, regardless of scope – narrow when compared to big-budget triple-A experiences, but wide-ranging for Liquid Swords’ tight-knit team – tradeoffs had to be made. Some systems received more attention than others, while diagnosed issues were unresolved before launch. Ultimately, the game needed to ship, but the irony of the studio’s situation is hard to ignore. Samson, in-game, forces you to act with urgency, and in a way that’s exactly how the game itself arrived.

But, to the studio’s credit, they have taken ownership of the game’s shortcomings, levied its criticism, and are forging ahead with an aggressive, sustained rebuild. Following Samson’s first post-launch update, five more followed to address the game’s myriad issues.

"Surely a few more weeks in development wouldn’t have forced the studio to undergo a campaign of redemption. "

Coming in phases, crashes and overall performance were the team’s biggest concern, swiftly followed by functionality fixes. Vital AI reworks, from how the city’s police force escalate their response, to how smoothly enemies move through combat zones have seen notable revision. That cumbersome camera work – a considerable bugbear amongst the game’s community – has been overhauled, with perspectives now shifting dynamically during encounters to ensure a clearer read on incoming threats.

Vehicular traversal is another element to be significantly reworked, the mechanic itself encapsulating Liquid Swords’ course-correcting workflow. First came physics, performance, and animation fixes, then expansions to vehicle functionality. Improved controls, adjusted impact damage, plus tweaks to city-wide traffic and navigation. Now, the focus shifts to cosmetic, with vehicle customisation options included in the game’s most recent content update.

As the update roadmap progresses, so too does the impact of the changes. A substantial content update arrived mid-May, delivering three new difficulty modes, new jobs, and, crucially, the most immersive addition yet: debt collectors who can turn up unexpectedly across more locations throughout the city, expanding the game’s central tension across the whole experience.

Then most recently it received The Pit update, adding the Lowline Circuit Race Track, vehicle customization, and a new area in the map. The new taxi gigs and jobs should give the world extra life beyond racing.

What Liquid Swords is delivering isn’t just a game that performs more stably, but they’re shrinking the gap between vision and reality. Samson: A Tyndalston Story is becoming the game it was always intended to be. Still a diamond in the rough, but as the studio puts it to us in our recent interview: “there’s value in games that are a bit rougher.”

And that roughness, they go on to define, imbues the game’s personality and focus. You could interpret this as a statement on triple-A game production at large – games which cater to all tastes invariably end up forgettable. The challenge for Samson was to make sure that its jagged edges – its personality and focus; its distinctness – didn’t undermine the core experience.

"What Liquid Swords is delivering isn’t just a game that performs more stably, but they’re shrinking the gap between vision and reality."

Unfortunately, however, that’s exactly what happened. In our candid post-launch interview, the studio acknowledged that they underestimated the impact of the game’s technical shortcomings. But, just as importantly, they admitted to a failure in communication. Samson’s players weren’t prepared for what the game actually was, in design and playable condition alike.

Going back to the dichotomous viewpoint among Samson’s players – some embracing urgency, others pushing back against it – the game isn’t designed to be comfortable. But, in lieu of clear pre-release messaging, that tension risked feeling like needless friction rather than intentional design. Alongside their decision to deprioritise technical issues in favour of getting the game shipped, the studio recognises that these problems should have been addressed earlier.

Still, regardless of Liquid Swords taking ownership of their shortcomings, the game remains divisive. Some players are rallying behind it, supporting a smaller studio by praising their ambition to fully realise their vision, while others are less forgiving, arguing that no amount of post-launch fixes – small team or not – excuses the game launching in such a compromised state. In many ways, the surrounding conversation mirrors the game itself, where tension proves difficult to fully agree on.

So, back to the original question: is Samson: A Tyndalston Story fixed? Well, technically, yes, in large parts. It’s stable, far more playable, and freshly shined with newfound polish. But, if we’re talking fundamentally, then the game is getting close. There’s still room to evolve, where limitations in mission variety still persist, for instance.

The bottom line: Samson is now a good, distinctive, still slightly rough game, but it’s no longer broken. And, most importantly, it’s worth supporting if you buy into its core idea – that of pressure being an all-encompassing motivator, no matter the cost. And, for the first time, it feels like a game no longer crushed by external pressure either, but beginning to be shaped by it.

Note: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of, and should not be attributed to, GamingBolt as an organization.

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