I find myself in a bit of an unusual position with Star Wars Outlaws on Switch 2 in that, having already played through the entire thing and reviewed it for our sister site Pure Xbox in 2024, I feel like I'm getting a quick second chance to see if my 8/10 score was justified. Spoiler alert: it was absolutely justified. So that's that bit sorted.
I was a little surprised when the reviews dropped for Massive Entertainment's take on the Star Wars universe because, for my money, they've actually outdone Respawn in a few critical ways. As much as I love the Jedi series, it does feel like a great big Star Wars rollercoaster that throws all the stuff you expect to see at you as you careen through at high speed. It's like climbing and fighting on a big film set. And that's fine.

Star Wars Outlaws has depth, though, to its environs. It's a richer world to inhabit as a character, a more interesting collection of places to explore. Massive Entertainment takes a step back from non-stop, flashy Jedi action in all the places you know to give us the down and dirty side of Star Wars. The hucksters, the criminals, the guys with big, long necks who are always in the cantina off their faces on Angry Bloody Rankors (it's an actual drink and I hope you like rum). You know the den from the movies, the hive of scum and whatever the rest of that sentence was. This is a game about that. And it rocks.
Now, standing back and taking it all in, I can fully understand — sort of — the lower scores; this isn't a stunner in the looks department (mostly with regards to character models) in the same league as a lot of modern adventure games, it sticks to tried and tested mechanics, and I think Kay Vess gets off to a little bit of a bad start as a character, likeable enough as she becomes as things progress. It's also a game that plays differently than you might expect. It's heavy on stealthy stuff and sneaking about in crouch mode until you rip your Kessel Runner pants.
You can, of course, pew-pew if you so choose, but this game wants you to take your time in appreciating the world that's been constructed around Kay's core mission - which is, essentially, to run away from her crimes and get out of the scoundrel lifestyle by putting together a crack team and pulling off a space heist. I mean, who needs dry-arsed pilgrimages to find Jedi powers and discover your true feelings when you can rappel up a wall, CQC some stormtroopers, and steal all their credits and clothes...and I might as well have all that spare wire and circuit boards, too. Cheers, fellas!

Set between the events of Empire and Return of the Jedi which, let's face it, is way, way cooler than anything that's happened in Star Wars since (old man Klaxon), Kay must pit her wits against the ruthless villain of the piece, the admirably slimy Zerek Besh. As the leader of a powerful crime syndicate, Besh is after you, so you're going to need to work overtime in putting together a team to pull off your heist, whilst also doing missions for an assortment of underworld syndicates.
The fun part here — and the bit that sells it all quite well as a sort of 'Han Solo simulator' — is that you can play all the syndicates off each other, make them really angry with you or your best pals. I loathe the Hutts, as an example, and I'll always stick the knife in when I can, so I constantly choose to do them in when the dialogue or mission opportunity presents itself.
The ramifications of this are that Hutt territory becomes hard for me to work in, so when a future mission calls for me to engage them, I may have to sneak in and space-murderise everything that breathes, rather than calling over for a cup of space tea and a space chat to work things out. It works well, doesn't try to be too fancy or too much, and is all the better for it.
That's a theme that runs through a lot of what Star Wars Outlaws is doing. Nothing about the gameplay loop here is new or fresh or designed to stun you into heralding the arrival of a brave new era in digital interactivity. No, instead you've got a little Deus Ex, MGS, Dishonored-lite, Assassin's Creed vibe going on — a real mish-mash — in how the world wants you to read and explore, creep around and make a few decisions as to how you proceed.
It is 100% not the best at everything it's doing, and that's fine, because what it chooses to do fits Kay, it fits the story and situation, and it's all very well put together. There were a few issues at the game's initial launch, mostly to do with insta-fail stealth bits, but these have long since been patched out.
It feels good to blast folk with laser rifles and all the cool gear from the movies, too (yes, they make all the correct sounds), just as it feels good to sneak through vents and plot and plan ways to take down areas full of bad guys. If you've ever thought, "I quite fancy a Star Wars skin on my Assassin's Creed," well, this is fairly close.

I say "fairly close" because to compare Outlaws too directly to AC would be to do it a disservice. Kay's adventure is vastly preferable to me in how it chooses to unveil its world map, you see, and in how busy it wants to keep you with faffing about and time-wasting. This is a roughly 30-40 hour story, with another 20 or thereabouts on top if you want to get everything there is to collect and see. It's very doable, and that's another feather in its cap. Alongside a character that grows into a highly likeable one, and a story that keeps things rattling along just fine — no spoilers from me — this is just a very good slice of Star War. It feels authentic in ways Jedi just doesn't, and it has loads of fun little nods and lore to find and explore for fans.
Away from the core shooting and stealthing about, Kay also has a speeder bike, a rappel, and a bunch of other tricks and tools for exploring that come courtesy of her pal Nix, who...look...let me be a savage for a moment: I don't care about Nix, or any of these goofy wee furballs that you're pairing me off with. But I understand that they are a way of making opening doors more interesting, so all-in-all, I'm not gonna mark the game down for having a Nix in it.
The speeder bike, though. Now, this is where we can finally start discussing the most important part of this review: how the game actually runs on Switch 2. You see, there's a moment in Outlaws that I was dreading — out of Switch 1 review habit, I guess — when Kay gets on her speeder bike for the first time and the game's first open world area is laid bare for you to zoom around at high speeds. Surely this was where the experience, which had been running very well to that point, would fall apart.

Alas, reports of poor performance have been greatly exaggerated. Not only is this a stutter-free experience 99.9% of the time, it's actually right up there and in the mix with other versions of the game in the old looks department. And it has motion controls, and cross-saves, and touchscreen inventory management to boot. Oh my goodness. Wait a minute, this is actually a fine port. Yub nub!
Does it have a slick 60fps frame rate? No, it does not. It's capped at 30fps - super smooth and responsive, though, especially indoors and in handheld, to the point that it felt better than 30 at times, possibly down to the game's motion blur (which can be disabled). Motion controls are well-integrated, you get lots of options for dialling in or switching it off for certain things, and alongside lots of camera sensitivity and accessibility options, we are on to a winner here. Even in docked, stretched across a 47-inch screen, this game looks great on Switch 2.

So, in summary, Star Wars Outlaws is a great Star Wars game overall. It's a little ramshackle in places, a little rough around the edges at times in its execution, and it sticks to tried and tested gameplay loops, but that sort of suits the vibe - it suits the setting with its low-lifes and liars and deadbeats and diehards.
It also feels like a 'moment' of sorts for Nintendo's new console. I've been worrying, you see, with Daemon X Machina not performing so well and rumours of this game being a shambles before it arrived, that we could be in for trouble with Switch 2. However, based on this evidence, I'm now quite excited all over again for my new console. Utinni!
Conclusion
Star Wars Outlaws on Switch 2 is a very fine port of a solid Star Wars game. Kay Vess's story may over-utilise tried and tested gameplay mechanics, it may not bring anything new or hugely exciting to the table, but what it does do is give you a well-crafted world stuffed full of lore through which to explore, sneak, and forge your own path.
With solid performance and good looks in both docked and handheld, and motion controls and cross-saves thrown in for good measure, this is an easy recommendation for Switch 2 fans of Star Wars.
Comments 207
Impressive they got it running well. I was not expecting good things when it was first announced. Seemed overly ambitious. But well done.
Can’t be buying a key card though unfortunately. So will have to pass.
Excellent, genuinely glad you enjoyed it.
Game does look pretty good, though I will be passing on it due to a tight gaming schedule, but, like I usually say, hopefully anyone who plays it has fun with it.
Glad to see that this game turned out so much better than what some people in the internet were saying. Hopefully it's the same case with Borderlands 4 and Elden Ring.
Have seen some footage and it seems to run really well
Makes me wonder why Ubisoft barely showed any material of the game on Switch 2, and that little footage they showed looked kinda rough
Will wait a while for the Ubisoft discount. I'm sure it will be half off during Black Friday sales.
I'd be interested but nothing I've seen of the main character makes me feel like playing as her for hours and that's really important to me personally.
Waiting for the inevitable Ubisoft early and hefty price drop! 😁
@PJOReilly
Hi ! You said "It's capped at 30fps - super smooth and responsive, though, especially indoors and in handheld".
Can you elaborate a little please ? Does it mean that it's better handheld than docked ?
Thanks !
I'm a Star Wars fan but first and foremost, a gamer and collector so I'm not getting it because it's a key card. It looks like a very good port though, I'm impressed.
@Hyrulean It feels like its capped at 30fps completely solid when zooming around and doing outside stuff. Indoors and in smaller areas, and especially in handheld, it feels like a very smooth 30fps. In fact I thought it was more until I was informed it was capped to 30! Hope this helps.
@PJOReilly I say especially in handheld because most games look and feel smoother to me on S2 when played that way. Hides the blemishes.
A consistent 30 fps is preferable to a frame rate that jumps wildly between 30 and 60, in my opinion.
Thanks for the review, unfortunately missed it when my usual retailer here in Italy had it and discounted so I'll wait for a similar if not better discount before getting it (not that I'd have the time to play it now between all the games I'm currently playing anyway, but still), but I'm definitely getting this and when I have the time for it playing it - so glad that I and others interested in doing so will finally be able to give it a try thanks to it now being also on Switch 2 first and foremost and even more so since it's an overall great port in spite of those exaggerated reports!
@PJOReilly Hi there! Great review as always!
Here's a little silly question: I'm not that big on SW, but I love Ubi games (I know, I know, I'm crazy, lol!). Is it enjoyable enough for a non fan of SW?
I keep seeing so many YouTubers posting a video about this game...apologizing for saying it looked bad in pre-release footage. Almost looked like Ubisoft was forcing them to apologize.
@PJOReilly Thanks a lot for replying, that's very kind !
Got quite excited there until you's all above reminded me of the key card situation. 😔
@HarmanSmith Not him but I can give you a hint! My husband played it earlier this year, as far as I saw you don't need to be a fan of SW, the main character is a mercenary and the story is absolutely different from any film or similar, so if you enjoy Ubi games this will be a pretty solid choice.
The early reports of subpar performance is starting to sound like classic Ubi dissing at this point. Glad its a solid port. Hard to justify current price with 50% regularly off on other versions, so i may wait for a sale. Will need a SD express card soon too!
I’m not interested in Ubisoft, Star Wars, or Game-Key Cards so it’s not for me, but I’m happy to see it’s a decent port.
@Olrun Oh, that's great! I would love some Ubi action on the SW2 so I may bite the bullet and buy it.
Thank you for your answer!
Anyone with a steam deck can confirm that this doesn’t even really run on it, and I’m not exaggerating. There’s baked in ray tracing that you have to disable by altering config/ini files, and after that’s done the game will run…. But it will not look pretty in the slightest, and visually it’ll be highly glitchy.
When I saw this announced for S2 I was skeptical at first, until I found out S2 has built in ray tracing support via T239 which is more or less a slimmed down RTX 30xx series. At that point I knew everything was going to work out fine and ended up pre-ordering it. Glad I was correct with my deductions, and this game should be proof that the S2 is more capable than a Steam Deck, and possibly even more so than an Ally or Legion when ports aren’t just brute forced.
This should also calm naysayers of S2 not being capable of handling current gen games, as Outlaws is a current gen only title, and one of the most demanding current gen titles. I have no doubt S2 can competently run any other current gen title, bar maybe Monster Hunter Wilds and Black Myth, as those have been some games that have struggled to get running properly on Series X, Ps5, and PC even….
Removed - flaming/arguing
Maybe there’s hope for Elden Ring yet….!?
As others have said, as soon as Outlaws hits the inevitable Ubisoft price-drop then I’ll be grabbing this without hesitation.
Other Ubi games I’ve played recently, including PoP Lost Crown and Immortals Fenyx Rising, have been pretty enjoyable. Especially Lost Crown, which IMO is a criminally underrated metroidvania
@HarmanSmith Hmmm. I'm not sure. It might feel like a slightly diluted version of your usual ubi game experience in terms of scope and how much activities outside of main missions. It is great fun though, if you like exploring and sneaking about.
"Not only is this a stutter-free experience 99.9% of the time, it's actually right up there and in the mix with other versions of the game in the old looks department."
I've been relying on Nintendo Life for Switch reviews for years now. That said, this review has me sceptical, when there have been so many reports of poor performance. I hope Digital Foundry pretty much line up with your assessment. We'll see.
@PJOReilly Nintendo Life: people complaining about key cards is also flaming and argumentative.
Does it require an Ubisoft account to play?
Prince of Persia gave you the option to skip account registration. In fact, I think the Switch version was the only version with this "feature".
Anyway, good to hear this version turned out well.
@Dr_Awkward Sorry? I didn't see the comments, I have nothing to do with them being removed 😅
@PJOReilly a diluted Ubi experience sounds right my alley (I love Ubi games, but sometimes they're massive!).
Thank you for answering, I really appreciate it!
Wait, the media was wrong? I'm so not shocked. It looks very good, and I hope I like it. I love Star Wars, so this might be a win for me.
As someone who owns the Series X version, wait for a sale. This is not worth full launch price. I got it for about $25 and felt I got my money’s worth. Wouldn’t have felt that way if I paid $60 or $70.
Solid port of a mostly mediocre SW game.
@Dr_Awkward So, when people write positive things about keycards, do you complain about that too? What you are asking for is biased media. There is negativity around keycards that is proportionate to the number of people that feel that way about them, and the comments are a good barometer of the overall feeling within the community. If you feel great about them, you are surely free to write that. Opposing opinions are also valid.
Yep, it looks like I will play this for the first time on Switch 2.
Thanks for the review!
@PJOReilly I do feel that with Switch 2 the focus is more on the handheld side of things for the best way to play. I guess like with handheld PC’s it’s better in handheld than the big screen although this does sound decent and a great review. Glad to hear my fears have been allayed by this.
Wish this sold more copies; really wanted to explore more this side of the galaxy with further sequels.
Great review - thank you! It’s great to see how capable the SW2 is, and surprisingly, Ubisoft is quieting the naysayers. I’m likely going to pick this up to support the game and Ubi - great first game to launch on the system.
Everyone is entitled to an opinion, and ours are quite different.
This game to me is a boring mess.
It looks bad, the AI is brain-dead, the characters are unlikable, the shooting is limp without any impact and the stealth is absolutely terrible.
If anything I think this game was overrated.
Didn't this game get like horrible review when it first came out? How did a port of a horribly reviewed game get an 8 out of 10?
Something seems fishy here. I might have to buy this game to review it myself.
Nice. I’ll decide to pre-order the physical edition last night… It been on my list of games to purchase for a very long time, but haven’t purchased it cause I’m sick of double launchers on PC. Plus it’s $60 for the gold edition so it comes all the added dlc
Great to read it!
Just not even remotely worth the price to play a far lesser version.
This is a $29.99 game max that even then is hard to justify at that price on Switch 2.
There's a lot to like about this game and how they're selling it on Switch ($60+Season Pass is a fair price). It's tempting, but the download is listed as 20.2 GBs, so for $10 more could this have been an actual Game Card and would it sell better?
@WhiteUmbrella If what you said is true ("There is negativity around keycards that is proportionate to the number of people that feel that way about them, and the comments are a good barometer of the overall feeling within the community") then the Switch 2 launch would have been a complete failure, not the fastest selling console launch of all time.
The anti-keycard people are, just like the S2 Launch Doomers, a small and annoyingly loud group of complainers.
The VAST majority of people don't care one way or another. This is why you don't see pro-KG or pro-physical media comments to NEARLY the same degree.
Just stop the complaining. It sounds like petulant, demanding toddlers.
I bought this on ps5 a while ago, put in 10 hours or so and really enjoyed it. Just got side tracked by other games in my limited time to play. Might pick it up again on switch 2 since I have more time to play it there.
@Dr_Awkward Agree with this. Most people really dont care. Ive bought 2 now and honestly I dont even realize its a keycard. Dont really understand the whining.
In a time when reviewers are critized for not giving 0 or 10 for games players love or hate, I love to see a good reviewer standing their ground on their opinion, and being respected for that like here at NintendoLife!
Great read!
Might have just sold me on this. Used to be a star wars nut in my younger days but the absolute dilution of quality with the never ending star wars content had me out. Being set during the empire and Jedi returns is a big selling point, I loved that era.
Also, why does anyone honestly care about game key cards? For all your uses and purposes it is exactly like a full game on cart, oh, minus the fact that it actually runs faster since it can read off your system faster than it can off a cartridge.
It's an Ubisoft game, and I'm not in hurry to play it. So I'll just wait for it and get the key card version when it's 20 bucks, maybe 30.
@Runex2121 @Dr_Awkward Just because you don't understand/agree with the “whining” you expect us to not complain about them?
Good luck with that! In the meantime, I’ll keep not buying them and give the exact reason why.
@dskatter imagine if everyone loudly exclaimed what they weren't buying every time something they didn't like came out. Yikes.
@Pat_trick “ If anything I think this game was overrated.”
For something to be overrated? Wouldn’t something had to be rated highly in the beginning? The game did terrible… it sold terribly and it was rated terribly. So it basically impossible for this game to be overrated.
@MonsterMike I’ll complain about key card releases every time! Especially when a company like Ubisoft should be able to stuff this game on a card with no issue.
Of course, Ubisoft isn’t doing great financially these days…
Hope we get the Jedi Fallen Order duology on Switch!
@dskatter and it is that exact behavior that makes you sound like a spoiled child. Thank you for proving my point.
Surely not for that price. It's Ubisoft, we know how this goes. This'll be half off in due time.
If you're the type of gamer that can't handle 30 fps, you shouldn't have a Switch 2. So many of the ports are going to require that.
This is why I don't understand why Nintendo wasted money pushing the machine to 120 when it's going to be like 15% of games at best that use it. The system could have been cheaper or had OLED if they just kept it down at 60hz and that refresh ms problem probably wouldn't be there.
If you pray to the alter of high frame rate you probably should stick to playing on very expensive machines. I'll be happy with a non soap opera effect machine.
No physical game card, no purchase. Sorry. Them’s the rules.
I had low expectations for this when it came out on ps5 but ended up loving it.
I was glad it wasn’t a Jedi story and the locations really took me to a galaxy far far away.
Tempted to double dip just to support it but have way to much else to play so doubt I will.
@AverageGamer I see where you're coming from, but I disagree.
The game has a rating of 75 on Metacritic. For me that's way too high. This game is mediocre in every possible way.
How's the soundtrack? Every piece of SW entertainment will be judged (by me) based on the score.
Can I play this offline? Like will the game boot up if you're in airplane mode because I have zero interest in registering a Ubisoft account. Otherwise, the game looks amazing.
Might pick it up cheap physical when it inevitably takes the Ubisoft price drop
Ubisoft games go on sale all the time so I can wait but this seems interesting enough. Huzzah!
@PJOReilly I really need to know if I can bypass the forced Ubisoft login by launching the game in handheld mode while flight mode is on.
I will never create an Ubisoft account.
This is such a big deal and I can’t seem to find clarification anywhere. I’ve seen the splash screen that says an account is required, but they seriously can’t force everyone to make an account that wants to play this, right. If so, this a massive, hard no for literally every future Ubisoft game for me.
"Alas, reports of poor performance have been greatly exaggerated."
"Alas" basically means "unfortunately."
I think the word you are looking for is something like "hooray!" 😂✌️
@Pat_trick A 75 score is extremely low… The only way to could possibly be lower if the game was downright broken, very very very below average, and was like 4 hours long. A “ mediocre in every possible way” game is very much a a 75…
I played it on Series X and thoroughly enjoyed it. Definitely underrated, mostly by all the usual Ubisoft haters. Glad it’s turned out well on Switch 2, though I won’t be double-dipping!
@Dr_Awkward Firstly, Wii U was also Nintendo's fastest selling system, for the first three months. Secondly, many of the complaints about game key cards are coming from people who actually bought the system, so your claim that the system sales and key card sentiment should line up doesn't actually make sense.
@HugoGED
I struggle with this as well, but I'm not sure if how bad it will be. I don't have a Switch 2 yet, but my son does. We have DKC on cart. I haven't bought a game key-card. I don't like the idea of it, but I just don't know if it will matter if/ when I buy my first one. Basically, you pop it in, brew some coffee and do a couple of chores while it downloads, and then hop into it. With future gaming sessions you pop the cart in and out as if it was all on cart. Is it really that different a gameplay experience after the initial download? Yes I know I have to pay for the storage, and they are shifting that cost onto me as a customer > this is 21st century capitalism: everywhere else in my life I pay more for less, but I don't give up things that I love solely due to that.
Truly a great benchmark to see what the Switch 2 can handle, as this struggles on even current gen consoles and some PCs. I’ll pick it up on sale.
Key Card or digital version?
Guess many of those YouTube and social media influencers will be scrambling to take down their videos on Outlaws poor performance?
Gotta love those YouTube content creators, they love to revise their opinions if it hurts their pockets 😆
@SolidSnake98 form physical, it’s a key card unfortunately
very exciting!
Looks very impressive, but being a game key card, this is a hard pass.
I couldn't care less about the debate over game key cards, since I've been buying only digital for years, but Ubisoft missed an important opportunity here. Had they released this well-made port on a physical cartridge, many people would have bought the game just to support the format—just like what happened with Cyberpunk.
@Ogusan
Maybe so. The issue is they are usually discounting these titles to the point that they would lose money on a full physical cartridge.
I'm so tired of people crying about game-keys and then buying games on Steam.
@AverageGamer In what world?
Rematch, Fae Farm, Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker, WarioWare Move it and The Evil Within are all rated 75 and are vastly superior games.
The Thaumaturge is rated 74 and it's definitely better than Star Wars Outlaws.
I don't know where you got the idea that a game below 75 is broken, but it's factually wrong.
Glad it’s such a solid port and impressed too. I played this a bit on Xbox when I had Ubisoft+ and enjoyed it, didn’t blow me away but had a decent time. I’ll wait for it to drop to £30 though, not interested in paying more than that for a key card.
@The_Nintendo_Pedant Thanks for killing my
joke stone dead haha
@NintndoNik Hey there! I have just tested this out for you, my friend, with flight mode on and launched from an account that hasn't got a save file yet, so a fresh new start, it lets you choose to play offline so you're good.
I've never seen any of the Star Wars films. Do I need to watch them to understand the game?
@Ashfordwasp not really
How is it "our lack of faith is disturbing" when NintendoLife was the one posting "news" about people bashing the game?
Glad to hear it runs well.
Wish we could get ports of the Jedi games from EA
@PJOReilly Amazing. Thank you for the confirmation! 🙏
@Ashfordwasp not really. the main character only exists in the game, though of course you'll miss the references to stuff from other Star Wars media
@kmtrain83 True, but at the same time no one is forcing them to discount the game in three months. I also believe that if they really want they could also set different prices for digital and physical. Even Nintendo is charging 10€ extra for the cartridge.
@PopularCorpse
You assume they're the same people. I, for one, stopped gaming on PC because of Steam.
@PJOReilly
"I'm always on duty!" 🫡🚨
@Ashfordwasp Yes, and you have to watch Phantom Menace twice as punishment (no you dont).
@Dr_Awkward
"Just stop the complaining. It sounds like petulant, demanding toddlers."
you should probably keep complaining about the complainers 👍 I think it's working.
Yes, this is awesome to hear! Love this kind of news, and I'm excited to play this at some point. It's going on my list! Thanks for the review.
@NintndoNik No worries. Have fun!
@The_Nintendo_Pedant 😂
Glad to hear this is a solid port. I'll check it out eventually.
@PJOReilly
So long as I dont have to suffer through The Last Jedi again I'm golden.
Would have been a day one purchase had it not been on a game key card.
ALL Game key cards must die
Not interested in SW, but wouldn't support it considering that it's a Game Key. Especially after Cyberpunk...
Very underrated game (understandably, given Ubisoft's botched release). Glad more can experience it now.
@Spider-Kev Seriously. This site convinced me it was going to be a disaster.
@SpaceboyScreams having played a ton on PC she's not as bad as you'd think.
I grew to like her.
I have trouble finishing large open world games on console, and so having the portable version will likely make it my preferred platform. The gyro and touch controls are an added bonus, and the latter are not available on PS5/ Xbox. I also wanted the DLC, so having it be the "Gold Edition" is great. I expect this may eventually make its way to PS Plus. It has cross save features. This title has made it's way onto my wishlist for Black Friday sales perhaps.
@PopularCorpse Anyone who bought a Steam game during the Wii U era can still play that game, even on a brand new PC. Nintendo requires you to buy it again. If you buy a game on Steam, you can play it for up to two hours, and get a no questions asked refund. Nintendo doesn't do that either. PC gamers also have the option of buying games on GOG, drm-free. Where's the drm free e-shop? It's not the same thing at all.
Nice review, thank you!
Glad to see gyro/motion in there!
Any mouse controls though?
I bought Outlaws earlier today. On key card, of course. It's cheaper than the eshop and I also had a $10 voucher for the store. Just a 20 GB download too. Impressive. Most impressive! I can confirm it plays very well too.
@kmtrain83 problem is you'll run out of storage really fast forcing you to delete and re-download back and forth, a real inconvenience that costs your time, patience and additional storage, while they profit.
Also, this is Ubisoft we're talking about, the "physical" release require a download on ALL platforms to work.
@progx
They were being honest about what they were seeing and being shown weeks before release, it’s extremely rare to have a major change like this from a game being previewed that close to launch. This is the PR’s fault plain and simple they should have seen this coming a mile away and instead they were fine presenting the game as a technical mess even a week ago.
@Pat_trick “ don't know where you got the idea that a game below 75 is broken”
I said downright broken, not just broken.
But most of those games you literally review scores was marred by literally technical problems. The Evil With particular was technical mess and basically unplayable on 360/PS3. Took multiple patches to get running at solid 30FPS on PS4, and remained broken on PC for years.
With Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker being a vastly older game… You can’t compare scores. Cause it would most likely score higher today.
WarioWare Move it is exactly the example of very very average game, but killed by it so short 2-3 play time
You basically naming games that all generally fall into my category I listed.
Considering I am not a fan of starwars I feel somewhat sold on this game. Will add to the wishlist.
@AverageGamer We're never going to agree then, because your concept of broken and mine are completely different.
Nice discussion anyway.
@HugoGED "a real inconvenience" because yout have to...DOWNLOAD A GAME.
The horror!
Thanks for the review.
I will play this next after I finish Cyberpunk 👍🏻
@WhiteUmbrella you are really trying to claim the WiiU as a success story? Huh.
@PJOReilly @NintndoNik
Thank you both for pursuing that Ubi login question! It was a crucial one for me - a mandatory login would have been a dealbreaker for me, as I'm already compromising by buying (eeww) a game key card. (The way I see it, Outlaws was a game I wanted to try, and a physical dongle to download the game was better than buying a nontransferable license on the eshop.)
But today I was fretting I'd have to cancel my preorder because I have no intention of creating an Ubi account. It's been so long since I've played any of their games, I'd forgotten all about that little wrinkle. Ubisoft absolutely should allow you to opt out of their tracking system.
So airplane mode, here I come! Glad to hear PJ approves of the game, too.
@Teksette I totally understand your point.
I personally don't mind signing in since I have Ubisoft Connect everywhere and I have coins (points) in there thanks to playing their games, which gives free in-game items for any of their games, etc., and even 20% off any game on their website if you reach 100 coins.
I like the way they did it though. You download their app (Xbox, etc.), and sign in there. From now on, any game you play on that console, you're automatically signed in.
@CriticalHit Did you enjoy Cyberpunk on Switch 2?
I have it on GOG and haven't played yet but very excited to.
@HalBailman Does it have mouse controls (no one mentioned that ). Not gyro, but mouse with Joy-Con 2.
Oh and, is it very sharp, like 4K sharp or is it a bit blurry?
The one on Series X is very sharp.
@Dr_Awkward it is when you pay for a physical cartridge, it is supposed to be plug and play with no downloads.
@Dm9982 I'm highly dubious the performance of this game on the S2 will calm the naysayers. Hopeful. But highly dubious. They'll just hop onto the next report of dropped frames or 30fps releases
So happy to hear it turned out to be a decent port. I bought it immediately (digital), to support their effort. Hopefuly the good reception will lead to more quality ports.
I’m glad this port turned out well. I still think this was one of the most underrated games of 2024. I’m not saying it’s amazing, but it’s solid fun and really immersive for a Star Wars game.
I think this game came out during the peak of “Ubisoft hate”, and because of that, people just dismissed the title. Similar to Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope and Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora. All solid games from passionate and talented developers, but came out during the worst time from a very anti-consumer publisher.
@Ramouz yeah it is really good. I go exploring mostly and do random side missions which sometimes lead to a really neat adventure. There's so much to do and see, you'll have a great time with it.
Im knee deep in NMS at the mo so this one is on the list for the inevitable Ubi sell off later on.
Glad it turned out OK performance wise after the previews.
Its a key card so I can still trade it in. Looks the type of game I'll enjoy once but probably not go back to.
@WhiteUmbrella What?
I still have my Wii U and I can, legally, redownload the games I bought back in the day from the eShop. Sure, I can't buy new games, but I can redownload what I had.
Why would I need to buy them again?
so if this was digital code in box or digital only would be a no. but the keycard ill play if finish it then sell it.
I've been looking at this game on other consoles. I don't mind the 30fps(if it's truly stable, zero dipping), and lower fidelity. I played most of my Witcher iii run on the first switch. It's a fair tradeoff for portability.
I have it on PS5, but have only put in about 10 hours or so. May pick this up on a sale as it has cross-save.
@jsty3105 Yeah it sucks. It’ll likely take something like Black Myth running at 30fps on S2 to quiet the crowd. Not sure if that’ll ever happen, but if it does… 🤣
Having seen what involvement it takes to get Outlaws running on the Deck, and the results, I can truly confirm that the S2 is so much more capable. While pound for pound power is not on the same level as Series S, the hardware and software tech built into this little beauty truly makes it nearly on par.
I’ve been playing Cyberpunk since S2 launch, and quite honestly I’ve been amazed. I’ve got that on Series X and Steam Deck as well, and directly compared the X version and S2 version in quality mode (couldn’t test performance modes as at the time performance mode needed/needs fixing on S2. Plus it’s 40fps vs 60fps)…. Truly amazing that the S2 version and X version in quality look nearly identical minus a few minor things - volumetric fog which determines how dusty/cloudy Night City is, as well as how detailed hair is. And crowd density. That’s literally it from a visual perspective. Amazing how great it looks and runs on S2
@HugoGED if you consider that "a huge inconvenience" then you really have a unique perspective on things.
Hate GKC but what else can we do until Nintendo makes 16,32,64 gb carts to fit the games...
Have you considered including the amount of space required if you review a key-card release as all data needs to be installed to the internal storage or SD card? It might be useful information to players with lots of games stored.
@SalvorHardin they (the YouTubers) were being honest? Let's not pretend that negative Switch 2 doesn't drive engagement especially in the rush to be first. They could've waited for the game to be out but no, gotta get those clicks early. It's all about reactions rather than research. Gaming sites are culpable too when they rush to post YouTuber impressions.
@WhiteUmbrella
Nintendos DRM during the Wii U era was terrible but you can still redownload Wii U games you bought previously. You can still redownload Wii games you may have bought back in 2006. There’s just no storefront.
@Olmectron PC games bought during the Wii U era can be played on a brand new PC, brand new hardware, bought in 2025. Wii U games can't be played on the latest Nintendo hardware (Switch 2) without buying the game again. If you can't understand, maybe you need more school time.
@Dr_Awkward It's a bit too early to claim Switch 2 as a success story too, but here you are, doing it.
@WhiteUmbrella I get it, WiiU was the best console ever, especislly because it used discs. Good job, mate, you convinced me.
Removed - inappropriate
"Looks, sounds, and plays great on Switch 2"
"super smooth and responsive"
or
"capped at 30fps"
"odd bit of hitching here and there when transitioning to a new area"
"character models can look a little rough at times"
Pick only one
@Weizsgriff there are no portable PS5s at this price point
@Wewewi both aren't absolute statements though 🤷🏻♂️ and can be true at the same time
@Dr_Awkward people have a right to protest things they don't like, especially as good paying consumers. You don't like it, just scroll on by instead of being toxic/flaming.
As for the game, I'm glad it turned out well, though as a GKC I also will pass. I'd consider a discounted digital only purchase, depending on if there's a difference in how the purchase is counted (I.e if I was sure it would be counted differently from a GKC purchase, which I honestly can't remember). Anyway, glad to see another big third party title where they seem to have mostly gotten performance decent!
How is file size not a con. This thing has to be massive
Honestly having it running at all is good. I can imagine putting many hours into this game exploring and as I’m Nintendo only I’m glad I have that option.
hope this means that they will port any of the assassins creed rpg games soon, those would be great for a portable.
That’s great news!!! I’ve been warning to play this game for a while!!!! Will buy it when it’s very heavily discounted since it’s a key card game…
@Weizsgriff
Everyone in their right mind will buy what they feel like buying, regardless of lectures from others.
@Elitepatriot Because it isn't, at least for it's scope. It's 20.2 Gigabytes.
@Weizsgriff Sorry but if you bought a portable device without knowing and expecting some compromises, you are the one that isn't in their right mind. Besides there's already many comparison videos with other versions like the PS5 one and it really looks great and has a stable performance.
@Weizsgriff If they only have a Switch 2 and aren't as concerned with framerates, I don't see the problem. Switch 2 is a thin, hybrid console with its own screen, not an obelisk near the size of a tower PC.
@HugoGED
I’ve had computers with hard drive storage since 1987 and the one constant is that I always run out of space no matter how much I initially started out with.
Somehow I am not surprised PJ gave this game a high score while being one of the few who calls it underrated.
@The_Nintendo_Pedant
what about people who complain about people complaining who complaining who complain about still others complaining?
Thanks to DLSS, image quality looks almost the same or even a bit better than Series S!
However... I can see most of the cutbacks are CPU-related, like NPC desity and even level of detail, all while keeping the core visual makeover and ray-tracing (mostly) intact. The Switch 2's GPU is a marvel for a mobile device, but the CPU part? I hope either Nintendo allows them or devs find a way to upclock it or something...
Sadly, the outside world is probably the biggest compromise for me, the beautiful lush grass looks different for some reason, and at least when comparing it to other platforms, it doesn't look as great. Geometry count is not really an issue, it looks a bit last-gen, but that's much, much better than the PS2-level meshes many Switch 1 conversions had in recent years.
Not bad for a first-year port, I imagine they were working on this port for some time, and they were likely thinking "well, how can we put these specs to use?", I hope in future years devs know the hardware better so they pull off more "impossible" ports like this one, with maybe even better results. Maybe Monster Hunter Wilds IS possible on the hardware, even if they pull back geometry...
I also hope it gives the game a boost because it is indeed underrated. Even if it doesn't have a cartridge (strange considering how much they reduced the file size), it's the best and most optimized handheld experience of the game yet.
@Wewewi Sort of taken out of context a bit some of these . Thats not fair 😅
As a lifelong Star Wars fanboy in my mid 40's, was even named after Star Wars and has a massive Star Wars collection and having tried this game on PC and not enjoying it one little bit I can say for certain I'll be skipping it here as well. There are those out there that will shill because its either Star Wars or its on their beloved Nintendo console but I stopped shilling when I became wise enough to realize there's no point in it...which was like a couple months ago... There's literally no benefit in it.
@WhiteUmbrella Don't be so rude, please.
You're right. What else do you want to hear?
But I can get another Wii U and ask Nintendo for tranferring my account. It's not so hard.
But okay, you're right, I'm wrong. I need to get back to elementary school.
Have a nice day.
Looks fantastic and plays well. Should be on the carrrifge though
OK, that is easily the best subtitle I've read in years
Well played NintendoLife.
Bought the game this morning and it's blown me away. Looks incredible, runs fantastic, it has gyro aiming, and only takes up 20 GB which is barely larger than Kirby. Idk which studio ported this game but whoever they are, Ubisoft better hang onto them.
And the game is actually really fun. It's nice to play a Star Wars game that doesn't center around jedi and lightsabers.
@Elitepatriot
Its only 20 GB!!! Absolute wizardry.
And it has extensive gyro aiming options.
@Spider-Kev
"what about people who complain about people complaining who complaining who complain about still others complaining?"
consider them... complained about. 😎
Well, if they want my money they need to release it in proper actual physical format and then I will buy it. Game key card is a hard pass and I won't support any game that is released on game key cards and I won't buy it digitally either.
Don't worry. The Switch 3 Edition will have 60 FPS and improved visuals.
I'll probably pick this up on PS5 some day. It looks fun to me. Whenever I buy a S2, I may double-dip.
Ubisoft + Disney Star Wars = no sale/2nd hand.
Man I really hope they bring Jedi survivor to switch 2 next
@Runex2121
Apparently it has cross save with your PS5 version.
I think the whole poor performance stuff was actually an PR trick . Think about it - now everybody is talking about this game and everybody wants to buy it just " to see "
@PopularCorpse exactly, it's their loss if they don't buy it on switch 2
@WhiteUmbrella @jsty3105
METAL GEAR SOLID Δ: SNAKE EATER struggles with good performance on Xbox and PS5, so you could point the haters in that direction.
@ibookboyuk
Digital Foundry highlighted this game as one of the early tests to see if the GPU in Switch 2 could support the current generation. I'm interested to see their analysis.
@kalosn
For a minute there, I thought you were going to complain about foliage. Always with the foliage.
At least George Lucas had the good sense to film his first movie in the Tunisian desert, so moviegoers would not complain about the d*arn foliage!
Uh oh, I can feel an internet firestorm brewing. I'm not getting a key card, but I will be getting this game at some point.
@Runex2121 you realise that all you've done is paid for an empty piece of plastic which you now need to put in and out of your switch whenever you want to change games, as if it were a real cartridge? Just buy it digitally if you don't care about physical media ownership. Not needing to switch cartridges is the one benefit of digital purchases, and a GKK is just a digital purchase without its one benefit.
@PJOReilly I got your joke, and I really liked it 😆
Seems like the Switch can handle resource heavy games, just at the expense of your consoles drive space.
@N64-ROX but with the ability to sell it on. You can't resell digital games
@N64-ROX
Is that any different than if the code was on the cart? Because either way you're swapping carts and installing things.
I dont really see a difference.
@kmtrain83 Thatd be great if true.
@JaxonH 20gb.... What! That is some magic.
@roy130390 that's crazy. I was expecting it to take all the memory space of the switch 2
@Dr_Awkward look at the grass trying to get people muted, whilst calling other people cry babies.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlKCBGzrB1I digital foundry very impressed with switch 2 port.. we should not take leaked early versions of the game as the final product i'm sure elden ring will also be much better then the video we saw earlier..
Aaah, an Ubisoft game I was not expecting to play but now will do for a couple of reasons:
A) I like Starwars
B) I like how cheap their games become as time passes
C) The option to play it on the go is so tempting.
I could care less about the game format debacle, will buy this eventually on NS2
What a fantastic port. I've played this game on Xbox Series X, Rog Ally and Rog Ally X and this gives me a great deal of confidence for the future of Switch 2 with heavy games.
@kmtrain83 Wow, are people complaining about foliage lately?
I mean, it's a GPU-heavy effect, so the Switch 2 can easily manage tons of them. Definitely not a Skyrim Switch case here.
But overall it just looks a little less blended in with the environment compared to other plaforms. Fortunately it's not very noticeable unless you compare it side by side.
I find your faith disturbing.
@WhiteUmbrella Ok, then pop your Steam disc into your PC, or go resell it to Gamestop or a friend. Oh, wait...
@Ramouz No mouse controls that I could see. I tried flipping the joycon to no effect, and found nothing in the settings other than "Motion Controls" on or off.
I own an OLED TV and Outlaws looks quite sharp. Difficult to really tell because the early scenes are in a murky area at night. Suffice to say, an Xbox X should be sharper. If you have a choice and are not interested in portable play, then it's obvious to go with PS5.
Digital Foundary just posted a comparison between Switch 2 and Xbox S, and it compares very well, and even better in some scenes. The brighter scenes they showed looked sharp.
@Runex2121 if the code was on the cart then you'd only ever need to plug it into your console once. It would download the game and from that point on would work the same as any other digital download. No need to ever swap the cart back in again. Which in my experience makes a huge difference in how frictionlessly and how often you end up actually playing the game. So with GKKs you don't get to play easily and you don't get to keep it forever. It's the worst of both tradeoffs.
@PopularCorpse Pointing out that Steam games don't have physical versions isn't the win that you and others here think it is. It's not a validation of Nintendo eroding physical media with key cards. If someone plays on PC as their primary format, and also has one or more consoles as secondary platform, being able to buy physical copies of titles that they like may be the majority of their incentive to bother with that platform. Some people collect physical games, when they don't yet own the hardware to play them. No-one is going to create a digital library for a platform they don't own.
There are actually physical Steam titles from the Wii U era. RE7 had a physical release. I believe it came on something like 7 dvd discs. If I personally want physical PC titles, I can do that. I have an M-DISC writer. There are places to legitimately purchase games DRM free, something that I actually favour. GOG has Hollow Knight: Silksong and Cronos: The New Dawn, at launch, with price parity with Steam, and DRM free. The PC OS Kazeta works with GOG and Itch io, allowing games to boot from carts the user can just make. I have a strong PC. If I had purchased Cronos there, I would be getting better performance, but I bought it on PS5, at launch, because I prefer to buy physical media. If there hadn't been a physical disc, I would have just bought it on PC. If Sony and Nintendo were to ditch physical media, they would lose the sales they get that rely on it. Those people aren't going to be convinced by you pointing out your belief that, because physical media doesn't exist in one place, it shouldn't matter if it exists in the other.
Just around to reading the review which was brilliant and have put it on my wishlist now. The package at €60 is great but have other games to focus on currently. Probably will dive in on a future sale and add it to the backlog
@WhiteUmbrella But you are making an argument that I never said anything about. I said I am tired of the Steam crowd crying about a modern solution to being able to trade, or physically share a key to a digital download. You went way off the deep end on an argument nobody made. Lol. You don't have to justify the existence of physical media to me, because I have no issue with it despite not using it for almost a decade. Options are good, but bad faith arguments are not.
@PopularCorpse "Bad faith arguments are not good."- Then why use them, yourself? Game Key cards are obviously, categorically NOT a solution to trade and share digital downloads. This makes literally no sense. If this were true, there would either be three formats available for most games (physical, digital, game key card) or just key cards and physical. The launch line-up and beyond has made it clear that key cards are being used to replace traditional physical releases, not being added as a third option. Being able to share games bought as downloads wasn't really a problem in the first place, since anyone who wanted the option to trade their games would just buy traditional physical releases anyway. Do you really believe that Ubisoft wants to damage their own profit margins by adding a resale option to downloaded games, rather than that they are trying to erode traditional physical media? It's not credible. At all.
Someone help me understand why they wouldn't uncap a game for handheld at least with VRR available. If it ran at 40 in some place and 25 wouldn't the screen just deal with it functionally?
Are there any games using VRR on s2 yet?
@Elitepatriot According to the E-shop it says it's 20.2 GB.
Bought the game yesterday on the eshop, no gamekeycard. Was really surprised by the peformance. I hope it will sell well for Ubisoft, because more 3rd party devs need to follow this example. Great port of a fun game.
Nice and honest review, thank you very much.
I totally agree.
Anyway, as long as the framerate doesn't drop below 30fps, I'm fine with it.
The only issue I have with this game is that I'm not going to spend 60€ for a game-key card, I'd rather buy it from the eshop, preferably on sale.
Call me crazy but I pre-ordered this game, full-price, key card and all... and I am absolutely loving it so far after more hours than I care to admit over the past four days or so.
Totally agree with the review: it's not without its jank. Neither is Star Wars though. They're both just a dang fun time.
@WhiteUmbrella Well according to the devs and Digital Foundry, the game cartridge doesn't load data fast enough for this game, so... blame Nintendo for the format. Sucks, but it's still better than download only.
again, many influencers were telling BS as usual about this game, the result is finally good and it will probably improve over time with updates
@N64-ROX as a digital only gamer I guess I just dont really see a difference until the servers go down whenever that may be. Until then, i guess the only real advantage must be if your trying to steal the game by playing on multiple devices or backing up the rom.
@user0 Just wondering, you don't want a gamekeycard because of game preservation reasons?
@SirLink But both are being installed on your switch2 in the end. Wouldn't you rather have a keycard which gives you the possibility to sell when you're done with the game or gift it to a friend maybe?
@Aloha after several years of experience, I've come to the conclusion that the money spent on hobbies will simply never be recovered, there's no point in deluding yourself. If you can even slightly mitigate your losses, consider yourself lucky, but the effort required to do so is often not worth it. I've fallen for it many times, but every time it's the same.
This is why I consider buying a game-key card with the hope of reselling it simply madness. My advice is to buy a game if you like it, without any other reason.
Anyway, I can understand if you want to gift it to some friend after you've done with it, but if I want to make a gift, I'd rather buy it new.
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