- THE JOY OF CREATION STORY MODE IS BETTER THAN ANY OFFICIAL FNAF GAME PS4
- THE JOY OF CREATION STORY MODE IS BETTER THAN ANY OFFICIAL FNAF GAME PC
- THE JOY OF CREATION STORY MODE IS BETTER THAN ANY OFFICIAL FNAF GAME PSP
Again, it’s a step up from The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Special Edition, which suffered from slow down, particularly during the game’s assassination animations. The consistency in frame rate is welcome, as it allowed for us to switch between weapons that have different attack speeds such as axes and swords, and even consider magic at the same instance.
Be it taking on dragons or hordes of draugr - skeleton soldiers in the game’s many crypts - it never got close to feeling unplayable. Thankfully, we didn't encounter any of these issues on The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim for the Nintendo Switch.įurthermore, the frame rate remained solid. Characters would literally merge into tables instead of sitting on chairs, and entire segments of dialogue sometimes froze, making the lack of polish pretty obvious.
THE JOY OF CREATION STORY MODE IS BETTER THAN ANY OFFICIAL FNAF GAME PS4
Also of note are the loading times, which are particularly long (in excess of around 20 seconds) when you boot up the game, though as you make your way through its many areas, this isn't an issue.Īll of these are minor trade-offs when you compare how buggy the PS4 version of the game was. They exist even when you traipse through Skyrim in the Switch’s handheld mode, but they’re less obvious. These include certain in-game assets like trees and grass appearing as you move closer towards them and jagged edges on stairs and other surfaces being visible as well. However playing the game on a bigger screen makes some minor visual inconsistencies apparent.
THE JOY OF CREATION STORY MODE IS BETTER THAN ANY OFFICIAL FNAF GAME PSP
The Elder Scrolls Travels: Oblivion PSP Impressions - Could Have Been Epic
THE JOY OF CREATION STORY MODE IS BETTER THAN ANY OFFICIAL FNAF GAME PC
Granted, it’s nowhere close to the fidelity of what you can do with the game on PC coupled with a slew of visual mods, but The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim for the Nintendo Switch holds its own in both docked and handheld modes. In fact it's a shinier version of the game that hit the Xbox 360 and PC in 2011, coupled with some weather and lighting effects from The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Special Edition.
From snowy mountain peaks to sprawling towns, each inch of the world of Skyrim has been faithfully reproduced with barely a pixel out of place. Perplexed? Read on to find out why.įirst up, The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim looks great on the Nintendo Switch. More importantly, it’s quite possibly the most playable version of the game till date, even better than last year’s The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Special Edition remaster for more powerful consoles like the PS4 and Xbox One. The Nintendo Switch is the sixth platform to get a The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, after the PC, PS3, PS4, Xbox 360, and Xbox One. It comes with a wealth of quest lines and more than its share of factions, and gives you so much to do that you will not get bored. The Elder Scrolls franchise has set the benchmark for open-world role-playing games, with Skyrim putting you in the boots of an adventurer that shouts evildoers off a cliff and punches dragons in the face. The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim is Bethesda’s second game for the Nintendo Switch after Doom.