![]() ![]() Out of those 54, only a handful got a physical release, and the vast majority of those have been done by company Limited Run, which specializes in bringing “digital only” games to physical format. There are very few PS2 classics that actually got a release on PS4 ( 54 of them, according to Wikipedia). We’ve been digging and here’s what we found. Overall, though, as a straight emulation, I just don't think it comes close to the proper remaster on the PS3.There’s a growing interest for PS2 games on PS4 recently, and in particular people have been wondering which PS2 emulated classics have been getting an actual physical release on PS4 discs. It's a PS2 classic, and it's good for what it is-it even has some things that look a tad better than on the PS3 version. (Can't post three pieces of media, so follow this link to the third video.)Īlso, keep in mind, I'm not complaining about the PS4 version. Oh, and another very minor thing to consider is that the PS4 version has some occasionaly frame rate dips below 60 frames per second, whereas the PS3 version, I believe, is locked at 60. One other thing to consider is the audio quality which has been remastered in the PS3 version and is generally much clearer and crisper compared to the PS4 version. The 1080p doesn't mean much if it's natively SD and the 720p version has much clearer textures and better anti-aliasing. ![]() Additionally, the PS4 version is natively SD upscaled to 1080p while the PS3 version is natively 720p, which makes a huge difference in gameplay. Looking at the other videos, the 1080p is nice, and the textures look pretty on par with each other in the opening cutscene, but in the actual gameplay, the PS3 version blows the PS4 version out of the water. The changed star patterns and the missing green orb are weird little omissions and there does seem to be a slight color difference, yeah, but that comparison video has an absolutely terrible capture of the PS3.īoth of these videos are much clearer and better comparisons:Īs far as I can tell, there is no missing or different reflections or effects on the precursor orbs, though it might display slightly differently. The question now is whether the PS4 version of Jak X will automatically unlock the secret content (as War of the Monsters does), or if it will try to read data from the saved game files from the other games on PS4 (if that's possible). This (and also the fact that J&D:The Precursor Legacy on PS4 initially launches with 16:9 widescreen activated) demonstrates that developers can tweak and customize their "PS2 classics" when they release them on PS4. For the "PS2 classic on PS4" release, the Sweet Tooth skin is automatically unlocked from the beginning. The original PS2 game would unlock a Sweet Tooth skin for Agamo if you had a saved game from Twisted Metal: Black with 100% completion using Sweet Tooth. ![]() I already brought up linking Jak X with Daxter on PSP, but the PS2 game could also read saved game data from several other PS2 games (other Jak games, and Ratchet: Deadlocked) to unlock secrets.įor what it's worth, there's a similar situation with War of the Monsters. ![]()
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