Ps3 emulator ni no kuni
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To anyone who paid full price for Ni No Kuni it feels unfair to charge those customers again, especially when Xbox has been doing similar “remastering” on Xbox 360 titles.
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It is a lot like finally running Half-Life 2 on a decent PC after running it on a crummy laptop for years. To me this game seems more like how the game was designed before it was altered to work on lesser hardware.
#Ps3 emulator ni no kuni Ps4
A quick look online led me to a video of someone emulating Ni No Kuni on their PC via a PS3 emulator and the game looks much closer to the PS4 “remaster” meaning that those elements are there in the original. What really stands out is the general gameplay portions which look very blurry on PS3, but that’s not the game’s fault but rather the hardware’s fault. The close up shots only look slightly better on PS4 and that’s expected. The Studio Ghibli animation looks stellar on both. I would get to a point in the PS4 version, stop, then switch to the PS3 version on the same screen. I played my PS3 version alongside the PS4 version. I am sort of dumbfounded at how vanilla this “remaster” is. Now as for the game, it’s great, (unless you listen to Drew talk about it on our very own Phoenix Down podcast) but any PS3 review is going to say exactly what anyone needs to know about this game.
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It lacks the title and I believe is just a straight port of the PS3 game. That is because the Switch version is not the remaster. In the platforms section I put down Switch with two asterisks next to it. I have a feeling Ni No Kuni 2 didn’t do as well as everyone hoped, but that still doesn’t make this price tag seem fair. Maybe I am just too used to remasters coming in at more reasonable prices (THQNordic seems to get the idea) but $50 for a game that reached Greatest Hits status (meaning it sold half a million copies) and did well enough to get a sequel seems a bit much. It was January of 2013 when Ni No Kuni hit American shores and six years later the game is back… and almost at full price (it’s $70 in Canada before tax). If I had to buy Half-Life 2 to see it with better anti-aliasing and resolution, it would probably feel a lot like Ni No Kuni’s remaster feels like, because that’s all that’s different here. Across different hardware and operating systems, Half-Life 2 has always been there and I have not had to pay to see it in better quality. Each time I have upgraded from the original mediocre HP laptop I started with I have brought Half-Life 2 with me and been able to see it with better settings each time. It was likely 2008/2009 when I got onto Steam for the lone reason of being able to play Source Engine mods. I have had Half-Life 2 since I started PC gaming.