As the Nintendo Switch 2 is preparing for launch, its third -party game list increases, including a trio of Sega and Atlus games which include classics and deep cuts. I was able to play the three before the Switch 2 release on June 5.
The three games – Yakuza 0: Cut of the director, Puyo Puyo Tetris 2 and Raidou Remastered – are strange bed companions who represent distinct eras and genres among the work of Sega. The three play well on the Switch 2, which is not surprising given the equivalent performance of the console of the PS4 console, but always reassuring the limited capacity of the original switch.
Yakuza 0 is the title of marquee of the trio for its role in the series – a prequel to the entry point of Yakuza and de facto of origin for the new players who details the origins of the favorites of the Kazuma Kiryu and Daigo Dojima fans. In addition to the story, Yakuza 0: the director’s cup includes a new mode, Red Light Raid, which allows you to choose a character from a list of Yakuza heroes and Nobodies to fight with successively more difficult rounds of enemy groups.
Although dated compared to the fight and net graphs of the latest in the series, the Yakuza pirate in February in Hawaii, Yakuza 0 is always a fantastic and super game to have on the new console. I only played it in moored mode, so I cannot say how the game plays in the hand with a graphic cap of 1080p and 120 images per second.
Raidou Remastered: The Mystery of the Soulless Army is a deeper cup, the third game of the Devil Summoner series within the Megami Tensei franchise, which was originally published for PS2 in 2006. must understand it by themselves. (I had to have a certain solution to a puzzle for me.)
Featuring the eponymous raidou as a detective helped by demons he captures and can use to investigate the inhabitants of his city or invoke a battle in a real -time fight, the game is a little slower and less dense than the graphically intense titles of today.
Puyo Puyo Tetris 2S is the opposite – a contemporary puzzle game released for the first time in 2020 for the current and latest generation consoles, the reissue preserves bright colors and the frantic gameplay with some new multiplayer modes. In our overview, Sega associated the players for 2-VS-2 puzzler matches where we tried to stay outside the others while cleaning the lines. For Switch 2, players can go from Joy-Con mode to mouse mode, which is precise enough but adds to frantic tension.
Look at this: I attended the Nintendo Switch 2 public experience