Visually, it looks as colourful and gorgeous as ever with the hand painted backgrounds and 2D, slightly cel shaded characters.įollowing the adventures of George and Nico as they track down the people responsible for the theft of “La Maledeccio” and uncovering the mysteries surrounding it again has been delightful both in hand held mode and docked, with no real perceptible difference between either. These point and click adventures are perfect for playing on a handheld, curled up on the sofa or out and about, and Broken Sword is no exception. I reviewed Broken Sword: The Serpent’s Curse on Xbox One three years ago and it has been nice revisiting it again on the Switch. Originally released on Xbox One, PS4 and PC in 2015 and scored 7.5/10 ![]() For this Re:Port Review, Mick Fraser reviewed Wasteland 2 and Nicola reviewed Broken Sword 5, while I tried to enjoy Senran Kagura Reflexions. I try and focus on how ports make use of Switch specific features like the touch screen, HD rumble, and single Joy-Con play. ![]() If you’re new to Re:Port Reviews here, I look at Switch ports of games on other platforms, Switch games in general, and more. The 30th Switch Re:Port Review is finally here with a look at a game I never thought would release in the West, a port of a game I never thought would see a release outside PC platforms, and a port of a game on basically every other system.
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