
METRO 2033 REDUX REVIEW PORTABLE
I also mean it in the sense that, thematically and technically, it doesn't seem like it would be a great natural fit for Nintendo's portable gaming console.

Metro Redux on Switch feels like one of those rare Switch games that shouldn't exist. However, I played it on a really nice PC with all the fixins'.

I can never un-imagine Artyom shoveling pig feces out of a mobile toilet as described in Metro 2033, the novel by Dmitry Glukhovsky.įor years, I've recommended Metro Redux to any gaming fan with a semblance of interest in speculative post-apocalyptic fiction, such as Fallout. I still hold the Library in high esteem for top scariest video game levels of all time. I beat Metro 2033 three times, and Metro Last Light four whole times, which is apparently on the low side. Metro Redux Switch Review: Metro Anywhere What's the big deal? Is it worth a grab, or is it best to play it on another system? Read on to find out. Unfortunately for past me, today is the day you can finally get Metro Redux on Switch and play it anywhere you want, even on a real metro tunnel underneath Moscow. If you didn't know before, now you know that Metro Redux is actually a collection that includes both Metro 2033 Redux and Metro Last Light Redux, as well as all relevant DLCs. More importantly, it's got two whole games to beat. If you picked up Metro Redux around launch, it was at first by some divine coincidence (or you found it on sale, probably on Steam) and you may have slowly, accidentally fallen in love with its intense gunfights and giant mutants.
