When I read that The Witcher's executive producer, Tomek Baginski, had blamed Americans and young people for the show's «painful» simplifications of the source material, I simply shrugged.
20.07.2023 - 16:59 / wccftech.com
Remnant II is out tomorrow for owners of the Ultimate Edition, and I've been playing the game for a while to check the performance on PC.
As reported yesterday, Gunfire Games confirmed to Wccftech that Remnant II is powered by Unreal Engine 5. It appears that the studio decided to make the change fairly recently, which is why the sequel wasn't advertised earlier as a new Unreal Engine 5 title. However, it is unique in that it is the only UE5 game I know of that does not currently support Lumen (though it does use Nanite).
Moreover, Remnant II does not support hardware ray tracing. In fact, the port appears to be relatively barebones when it comes to graphics options available to the players.
It does offer all of the possible display modes (Full Screen, Windowed Full Screen, Windowed), a motion blur toggle, a frame rate limiter for 30, 60, and unlocked (sadly, you'll have to rely on an external limiter to cap it at a higher frame rate), and the following settings:
Again, as Gunfire Games revealed in the aforementioned interview, Remnant II does support all three upscalers (NVIDIA DLSS Super Resolution, AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution 2, and Intel XeSS). Finally, there's a Field of View modifier setting (a welcome bonus in a third-person game) and an option that minimizes input latency at the cost of a small performance loss.
There is no support for High Dynamic Range (HDR) displays, which is very disappointing for a game released in the latter half of 2023. Microsoft's AutoHDR system built into Windows doesn't kick in, either, so you're stuck with Standard Dynamic Range (SDR) when playing Remnant II.
But how does the game run? You'd expect very smoothly given the absence of cutting-edge features. While Remnant II does run
When I read that The Witcher's executive producer, Tomek Baginski, had blamed Americans and young people for the show's «painful» simplifications of the source material, I simply shrugged.
After months of speculation, the Red Dead Redemption remaster/remake saga hit a damp squelch of an anticlimax yesterday afternoon, when Rockstar proudly announced it was porting the basic version of the original PS3 and Xbox 360 game to the Nintendo Switch and PS4. For $50, no less. Fans were upset.
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Rockstar Games today announced that a port of the original Red Dead Redemption is coming to PS4 and Switch.
Oh, and possibly, dear. If you were hyped up after all those rumours about a Red Dead Redemption remake then you are going to be disappointed as although the game has been announced it is for Switch and PS4 only. This is not a remake, this is not a 60fps 4K version for modern consoles, this is the old game but running on new consoles. Well, a ten year old console in the case of the PS4.
We’ve been hearing rumours about a remaster of the original Red Dead Redemption for some time now, and they have indeed turned out to be accurate- sort of. The widely acclaimed Western open world epic, which released for PS3 and Xbox 360 in 2010, is indeed coming to modern consoles, though it doesn’t look like it will be making too many major enhancements or changes.
In a move that stunned onlookers (me) and assembled experts (also me) are describing as «mystifying,» Rockstar has finally come out and announced its freeing Red Dead Redemption 1 from its PS3 and Xbox 360 prison, by, uh, porting it to the Nintendo Switch and the… PS4? Apparently so!
Red Dead Redemption is one of the best games of the PlayStation 3/Xbox 360 era, and part of that is because it hasn’t migrated from those platforms since it arrived in 2010. After 13 years, that finally changes with a surprise jump to PlayStation 4 and Switch.
Red Dead Redemption is coming to PS4 and the Nintendo Switch for the first time.
Red Dead Redemption and Undead Nightmare are headed to Switch and PS4 very soon.
Good news for anyone who won't be watching the Hemsworth-helmed Witcher Netflix show: Author Andrzej Sapkowski has confirmed that he's working on a new book in the original series, and he thinks it'll be ready soon. No word yet on whether it will be suitable for Americans and young people.
Polish author Andrzej Sapkowski has confirmed he's writing another book in The Witcher series that will presumably continue the story of Geralt of Rivia.