Dead rising 2 ps4 review
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Instead of looping pleasantly from one track into the next, each song simply stops abruptly, and occasionally minutes pass before the next track is played. I first noticed it with the in-game Muzak system, which plays a few dozen mall/casino tracks throughout the game. Off The Record, on PS4 at least, has almost unacceptably broken audio. I’m very familiar with the original Off The Record, and I even put a little time in playing each version back to back just to make sure I wasn’t imagining things.
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What I’m not fine with are this release’s bugs. Actually, remastering such a massive game would be an unspeakable amount of work, so I’m fine with this minor (but very welcome) upgrade. Similar to Resident Evil 5 and 6‘s re-releases, this is simply the original game running at maximum specs, which is fine by me. 60FPS is probably the most noticeable difference, and it’s a very welcome one (although that comes with a caveat that we’ll get into in a bit) The visuals themselves look more or less the same, although a texture here and there is slightly better. While CJ is tackling the original, and Jorge is sinking his teeth into its sequel, I’m more than happy to spend some time with DR2‘s improved sister game, Off The Record.įirst things first, we have to talk about what’s changed. I’d been hoping for the chance to play these games again on my new consoles, and Capcom delivered. While the original Dead Rising is still my favorite of all of them, Off The Record, the remixed version of Dead Rising 2, is easily my second.