Nintendo Switch FIFA 18 Review – Is Portability Enough To Justify The Cost?

Nintendo Switch FIFA 18 Review – Is Portability Enough To Justify The Cost?

6 years ago
Anonymous $uquhsGEL_U

http://wccftech.com/review/nintendo-switch-fifa-18-portability/

FIFA is one of those games that if you could take it everywhere you definitely would. I remember playing the terrible PlayStation Vita ports of FIFA on the bus to school just to pass the time. At University I took this to another level by installing FIFA on my laptop, that way I could play a few games with my mate before lectures. The Nintendo Switch ( Amazon, $299.99) version of FIFA 18 looks like it could finally deliver a proper port of FIFA without having to lug a laptop around campus.

As someone that has put in over one thousand hours across the Xbox 360 FIFA games, playing FIFA 18 on the Switch felt almost nostalgic in a way. The game is running on a custom engine made specifically for the Switch, though it feels a lot like the same engine used on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. Switch owners have come to expect their games having some type of drawback to them and unfortunately, FIFA is no exception to this.

Nintendo Switch FIFA 18 Review – Is Portability Enough To Justify The Cost?

Oct 10, 2017, 1:31pm UTC
http://wccftech.com/review/nintendo-switch-fifa-18-portability/ >FIFA is one of those games that if you could take it everywhere you definitely would. I remember playing the terrible PlayStation Vita ports of FIFA on the bus to school just to pass the time. At University I took this to another level by installing FIFA on my laptop, that way I could play a few games with my mate before lectures. The Nintendo Switch ( Amazon, $299.99) version of FIFA 18 looks like it could finally deliver a proper port of FIFA without having to lug a laptop around campus. >As someone that has put in over one thousand hours across the Xbox 360 FIFA games, playing FIFA 18 on the Switch felt almost nostalgic in a way. The game is running on a custom engine made specifically for the Switch, though it feels a lot like the same engine used on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. Switch owners have come to expect their games having some type of drawback to them and unfortunately, FIFA is no exception to this.