But I wouldn’t be surprised if input day/latency ends up semi botching lets say Power Stone 1&2.
Still neat to have in 1080p/4K, and just that convenience factor(Digital) on a modern console be it Switch or PS5.
Power Stone 1&2 on a 32″ Sony WEGA Trinitron CRT, with a Dreamcast, Controller + VMU & actual software can’t be beat.
I’d rather play Prime 4 on PlayStation VR2.
As for Donkey Kong Country Returns HD….Thank god they removed those shoe horned tacky motion controls(As much as i love motion controls when properly implemented) but even with traditional controls, if it’s anything like Tropical Freeze I’ll probably pass.
Collection 2 of Capcom Fighting will be a must. If input day/latency ends up semi-botching, as in Power Stone 1 and 2, I wouldn’t be shocked, though. It’s still nice to have in 1080p/4K, and it’s just more convenient (digital) on a modern console, like the Switch or PS5. Of course not, but will they perform as well as they do on Dreamcast? Furthermore, OLED motion is completely incomparable to CRT SDTV motion.
With a Dreamcast, controller, VMU, and real software, Power Stone 1&2 on a 32″ Sony WEGA Trinitron CRT is unbeatable.
And my enthusiasm for Prime 4 is waning. I’m leaving if it’s anything like the most recent Prime Remaster. The switch lacks a sensor bar for gyro motion aiming, a wii remote, and a nunchuck (the joy-cons are a garbage substitute), and you have to put up with OLED motion blur, which is terrible for first-person games unless you play them at 120 frames per second or use black frame insertion. Even then, it still can’t compete with CRT. No, I’m not interested in it. Wii Prime 3 was a game changer.
Switch’s Prime Remaster was like another can being put together. I would prefer to use the PlayStation VR2 for Prime 4. Following Prime 3 on the Wii, that would be the franchise’s next logical development. Donkey Kong Country Returns HD, speaking. Even though I love motion controls when they’re done right, I’ll probably pass even with conventional controls if they’re anything like Tropical Freeze. Thank goodness they got rid of those shoe-horned, tacky controls. Comparing Tropical Freeze to the SNES’s Country Trilogy, DK is too sloppy and heavy to manage.