Death and Taxes Review (randomatwork)
Another review said this doesn't have the depth of Papers Please, and they're correct - but really, despite the surface similarities, this is a totally different type of game once you get into it.
Although it seems like it'll all be about the difficult moral decision of choosing who lives and dies, it's actually not all that difficult to decide - the humans whose lives rest in your hands rarely have much personality, and with the absurd nature of the game's world (i.e. you are a skeleton working under Fate, who occasionally leaves his cat in charge for you to report to), it's easy to feel distant from the moral choices you're making.
Instead, this game is really about enjoying the goofy jokes, strange world (I love the various gags involving the plant department), and quite rich story with multiple endings (I haven't unlocked them all, but the one that I did unlock was funny and morbid and very enjoyable). Your choices don't matter a great deal, but in a way that's very topical for the story - a recurring dialogue with Fate, after all, is about whether your choices matter at all in the grand scheme of things.
There's quite a few unique characters to meet and talk to, fun costumes to wear, and plenty of mysteries that I still haven't discovered just yet. You might not have to face tough moral choices in the course of working as a Reaper, but it's still pretty fun to get a drink at the end of the week and talk to a cactus about life.