Keep in mind that these games, all of them, have an issue with variable frame-rate, and if you cannot keep either the 30 or 60 FPS cap, the game will slow down to avoid this, either use the “Auto” FPS cap (but that makes the camera motion stutter a bit, for me at least) or make sure your settings and resolution are good enough to keep either of those FPS caps, at all times. Similarly to Yakuza 3, on my Ryand RTX 3060 Ti I’ve played this game at 4K DSR Downsampling and 125% extra Resolution Scale on top of that, and still enough GPU headroom to keep the 60 FPS cap. It feels like we’re being given a huge lot more of story with each of these characters, to discover, compared to just playing as Kiryu in previous games, and it also feels quite refreshing. At first it feels weird but that feeling goes away pretty fast because the new characters have incredible personalities and backgrounds. Then the game introduces new playable characters, each one with their own part and chapters in the story. It feels great to revisit our favorite city but expanded. Yakuza 4 feels like the more balanced game of the three present in this remastered collection Firstly, compared to Yakuza 3, the game opens Yakuza 4 feels like the more balanced game of the three present in this remastered collection Firstly, compared to Yakuza 3, the game opens up a lot more when it comes to exploration and we get to play in a very nice expanded Kamurocho, with rooftops, underground areas and even sewers.
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