

Thanks for signing up Kazuma Kiryu, A Father To Us All And when it comes down to it, Yakuza 3, 4, and 5 are very important pieces for the emotional conclusion that awaits in Yakuza 6: The Song of Life. You've probably played what's already available on PC and Xbox. If you're considering the Yakuza remasters, you're in it for the captivating story of Kazuma Kiryu and the unique brand of humor that rides alongside all the hardboiled drama. Impressive graphics aren't why you're here, though. It's worth noting that they're not Series X-optimized games, so you're essentially playing the Xbox One X version. On Xbox Series X, these games will still render at what looks like a 1080p resolution and will maintain a steady 60fps-there are no graphics options available here. The Xbox versions may not be as visually pleasing as what PCs are capable of, but they're certainly fine in their own right. Even though real yakuza use a gamepad (Sega's words, not mine), proper keyboard and mouse controls are available, like previous PC ports. The PC version in particular gives you several graphics options like resolution, anti-aliasing, texture and shadow quality, ambient occlusion, Vsync and frame rate limits, and render scale for forced supersampling. While these are three PS3-era games with some dated assets and compressed cutscenes, each one is running much higher resolutions and frame rates, with better lighting and finer graphical detail to bring them closer to the modern entries.


It's not too much of a surprise considering that this collection rolled out on PS4 starting in 2019 with great technical results. The good news, too, is that these Yakuza remasters run incredibly well on both PC and Xbox. Now Playing: The Yakuza Remastered Collection -Official Xbox And PC Launch Trailer Technically Speaking By clicking 'enter', you agree to GameSpot's
