![]() ![]() In North America, Nintendo published the Switch version of Live A Live. Digital Trends found the game charming, with George Yang saying Live A Live "has the hallmarks that make it a good entry in the genre" in his three-and-a-half star review of the title. On top of that, this remake of a 1994 SNES game also gives the experience an extreme visual facelift with the HD-2D visuals that make games like Octopath Traveler 2 shine. Each comes with its own protagonist and gameplay gimmicks before they all crescendo together in a final chapter. Its story is split up into eight different sections set across eight different sections: Prehistory, The Middle Ages, Imperial China, Twilight of Edo Japan, The Wild West, Present Day, The Near Future, and The Distant Future. Live A Live is a unique grid-based RPG with a fun narrative gimmick. The game comes out on PlayStation consoles and PCs on April 27. Square Enix's beautiful HD-2D remake of Live A Live will no longer be a Nintendo Switch exclusive starting next month. ![]() Now that we’ve gotten our hands on the new system, we can share for certain if your old Joy-Cons will work with the new Nintendo Switch OLED. For Nintendo fans who are looking to upgrade their original units, the new OLED screen could be very tempting, but if you’ve had the Switch for a couple years now and have collected some of the many colorful Joy-Con controllers, you may be hesitant to buy this new one if they aren’t compatible. That means it can be docked and played in handheld mode just like the original. Unlike the Switch Lite, which has the controls connected to the device itself, this new Switch OLED is another version of the standard Switch. Even though the system can’t push games to actual higher resolutions, the OLED screen still makes every game on the Switch look that much sharper. OLED screens are seen as the superior screen type thanks to how they make colors look so much more vibrant and deep. What it does bring is the titular OLED screen for when you play it in handheld mode. The Nintendo Switch OLED is the latest iteration on their handheld/home console hybrid machine, but it isn’t bringing much of any new power. While it wasn’t the rumored Switch Pro, Nintendo did release a new version of their latest hardware in 2021. ![]()
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