I'm so torn reviewing Radio: Outcast. Part of me appreciates its confidence in itself, its unashamed boldness, the vivid voice acting and the various, quirky mechanisms it deploys (the exiled god/the cowboy/the con man trio of main characters, the use of a Sony Walkman in the old west, the acquisition of powers). The other part of me, unfortunately, feels like it never truly establishes the identity it strives for and fumbles the delivery of a potentially fascinating story.My biggest gripe is the lopsided ratio of dialogue and narration. There are so many times where characters are spending minutes telling me what happened when I'd rather have heard it happen for myself. Possibly as a consequence of the distraction, or maybe just awkward scriptwriting, I often found myself losing tracks of events and therefore not being invested. Characters would pop up seemingly from nowhere or new sertings would arrive with little heads up, causing unnecessary disorientation. I had to read the transcript alongside most episode to maintain some sense of comprehension. The plot is messy and as the season closed I still wasn't sure exactly what anyone's motivations were. The trio of main characters may have diverse traits but they never really gel as you hope they will. Ultimately, your enjoyment of Radio: Outcast will depend on what you are looking for. I've seen enough positive reviews to believe there is an audience for the show and therefore maybe it just didn't appeal to me. I've given three stars because I do recognise there are some positive amongst the flaws. Disappointingly I couldn't be look past its drawbacks enough to feel I enjoyed it.