But if you already have the game, there simply hasn’t been enough done in the porting over to the PS4 to justify the cost. As always with any re-master, if you’ve never played the game before, this is a no-brainer, the game is sufficiently good enough to warrant a purchase. But there’s very little in either the pricing or the technical improvements of the game to justify the full price cost, especially when Tomb Raider: Definitive Edition is now available for CAD $40-$45 depending on where you buy it. So what Square-Enix is asking PS4 and Xbox One players to do is shell out CAD $70 on a game with all its DLC collected, and much needed improvements that make game run as originally envisioned, without really screaming “next gen.” This is no knock on the game itself, as it is still one of the most pleasant surprises of the last generation and deserves to be enjoyed by everyone. Better lighting and fog elements have also been added to the mix, so, on paper, United Front Games can definitely say the game has been upgraded. As to be expected, textures have been sharpened up, draw distances are better, so draw-in and pop-up is not so pronounced, and the framerate has stabilized, not plummeting dramatically during busy traffic or action sequences. Where Tomb Raider: Definitive Edition showed obvious gains in technical performance, Sleeping Dogs feels marginal, with improvements that will only be obvious to the technically inclined. Unfortunately, it seems like United Front Games either had less time or is less familiar than Crystal Dynamics when it comes to the new hardware. Sleeping Dogs followed this wisdom, and now in the same way, with the more powerful yet easier to work with PS4, it also follows the new conventional wisdom that multi-platform games tend to perform better on Sony’s new hardware. When Sleeping Dogs first hit consoles, the conventional wisdom was that the Xbox 360 was easier to work with, and thus multi-platform games tended to perform better on it than the more exotic and powerful PS3. The differentiating factor here is the technical improvements, but there’s a serious question about whether it’s worth that asking price. It’s still a vastly underrated, highly recommended open world game with one of the best locations in gaming today, but now it’s available on current gen consoles with a full price of $70. Story and content wise, this is the exact same game that came out in 2012, only now, like a typical Game of the Year edition, it comes packed with all the DLC, including a supernatural romp, and an homage to Bruce Lee’s Enter the Dragon.
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