

With success comes support, and the Switch has consistently seen far more support from other companies than the Wii U ever saw after its launch. With a constant stream of great software, and the addition of an OLED screen, there’s a lot of juice left in the Switch.Įverybody with a Switch knows about Animal Crossing and Super Mario Odyssey, but there are many great games for the system beyond Nintendo’s core classics. Like, Disco Elysium, one of our favorites of 2019, and, if anything, a game we actually underrated at the time, has found what might be its ideal home on the Switch. And not only does Nintendo continue to pump out some of the best games for its own console, but the Switch has become home to some of the best multiplatform games released over the last few years. Instead of a straight redux of Breath of the Wild, it takes the series into some fascinating new territory-which is typically the mark of a great Zelda. The old gal saw another huge bump with May’s release of the latest Zelda game, Tears of the Kingdom. However, if we want to play in multiplayer mode with several players, we'll have to install an external program to be able to use a gamepad.The Switch might have just celebrated its sixth birthday, but Nintendo’s little box is still thriving.

We also appreciate the fact that if we want to play a single-player mode, we won't have to do anything complicated: we only have to open the game and choose the video configuration to start playing. We can choose between characters of the likes of Mario, Pikachu, Ryu from Street Fighter, Sonic, Pac-Man, Donkey Kong.Īll the action takes place on scenarios from the original games featuring these characters, which can make use of special attacks and unique movements, therefore, playing with one or another of them will never be the same. With a graphical aspect similar to that of that video console, we can now play a video game that lets several participants play on the same PC at the same time.

Fighting title with characters from several video games

for the Nintendo 64 console and here we now have an alternative development for PC: Super Smash Bros Crusade. The first of those games was Super Smash Bros. saga back in 1999 offering us fighting games featuring characters from the Japanese company that had to face up to others of the likes of Sonic or MegaMan.
