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Draft:Noah Caldwell-Gervais

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Noah Caldwell-Gervais
Personal information
Born1988 (age 36–37)[1]
YouTube information
Years active2013–present[1]
Subscribers299 thousand
Views41 million
Contents are inEnglish

Last updated: July 7, 2025

Noah Caldwell-Gervais is an American video game critic and journalist, best known for his eponymous YouTube channel. He he has also written reviews for gaming website Polygon and essays for The Baffler.[2][3]

Early Life

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After graduating high school, Caldwell-Gervais worked several food-service jobs up until his YouTube career took off.[1]

Career

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Caldwell-Gervais was working as a line cook at a pizzeria in Seattle when he uploaded his first critique on YouTube, a 50-minute analysis on the Fallout franchise, in 2013.[1] In an Interview with Critical Distance, he said he grew frustrated with the online discourse around the Fallout games and needed an outlet.[4] He spent the next years dissecting videogame franchises such as Mass Effect, Red Dead and Call of Duty. In 2015, he and his wife took a documented eight-month road trip across the US in a VW Bus they bought two years earlier.[1]

Caldwell-Gervais has worked for the online gaming website Polygon from 2016 to 2017 where he wrote reviews for games such as Dangerous Golf, Breached, Obduction, Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Wildlands, The Long Journey Home and Heat Signature, among others.[2]

In 2019, he took to the road and documented his travels to the real-world locations that inspired and featured in the original Fallout, Fallout 2 and Fallout: New Vegas.[1][5]

In 2024, he has published two videogame-centric essays in The Baffler about 11 Bit Studios' Frostpunk 2 and live service games respectively.[3]

Influences and style

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Caldwell-Gervais named travel authors Bill Bryson and William Least Heat-Moon, as well as film critic Roger Ebert, among direct influences on his writing style.[4] According to one interviewer his passion for travelling is "a recurring motif" in Caldwell-Gervais' videos.[1]

Caldwell-Gervais justifies using video as the format for his critiques in that he can truly show what the game is like while talking about it, which wouldn't be possible in print using only screenshots.[4] Additionally, in an interview with David Bowman for Super Magfest he recounted his frustrating experience trying to have a conversation about Fallout in an online forum and eventually settling on the "YouTube format" to express himself.[6]

Caldwell-Gervais' video essays are usually longer than an hour and frequently reach lengths of multiple hours, taking their time to place the subject of analysis into a wider historical, political, cultural as well as personal context.[1][7] His revised and expanded "A Thorough Look at Fallout" video released in 2023 is his longest to date, clocking in at almost nine and a half hours.

His videos usually feature an intro sequence and hand-drawn titlecard at the start. Caldwell-Gervais shared in a podcast interview that they additionally fulfill the role of "[getting] everyone on the same page [...] that this is going to be a lofi production".[4]

Bibliography

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Reception

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Nolan Good, writing for the Willamette Week, likened Caldwell-Gervais to Roger Ebert. He further wrote: "Noah Caldwell-Gervais is playing a role in both legitimizing [video games] and demonstrating what [they] can accomplish."[1] One way he does this is by comparing video games to other art forms, as Mitchell Tanaka of Chapman University pointed out.[7]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Good, Nolan (20 May 2020). "This Oregon-Based Vlogger Might Be the Closest Thing Video Games Have to Roger Ebert". Willamette Week. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
  2. ^ a b "Noah Caldwell-Gervais Profile and Activity". Polygon. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
  3. ^ a b "Noah Caldwell-Gervais". The Baffler. Retrieved 18 April 2025.
  4. ^ a b c d Swain, Eric (18 June 2016). "Critical Distance Confab Episode 37 – Noah's Crit". Critical Distance (Podcast). Retrieved 18 April 2025.
  5. ^ Caldwell-Gervais, Noah (3 May 2019). "The Real Life Landscapes of Fallout 1, Fallout 2, and Fallout: New Vegas". YouTube. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
  6. ^ Bowman, David. "Interview with Noah Caldwell-Gervais". Super Magfest. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
  7. ^ a b Tanaka, Mitchell (21 August 2020). "3 Video Essayists Who Offer a Deeper Look at Video Games". Study Breaks Magazine. Retrieved 18 April 2025.