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Resident Evil Revelations For The Nintendo Switch Has Motion Control

Scarier Than The Original?

Being trapped on a boat filled with the infected is bound to creep you out, but its fair to say that Resident Evil Revelations and its sequel weren’t the franchise’s finest outing. Part of that might be due to coming out for the 3DS, and as a result not allowing for much of a haunting atmosphere.

However, it looks like the Switch has decided to amp up the scares by including motion control. For any of you who have played a game with bad motion controls, you know that there’s nothing more aggravating, so this could be something of a gamble on Capcom’s part.

According to an article on Polygon

Resident Evil: Revelations was a Nintendo 3DS game from 2012 that was later ported to a variety of home consoles, and is joining Resident Evil Revelations 2 in a compilation release for the Nintendo Switch on Nov. 28.

Capcom has released a trailer showing some of the changes that will be coming to the game, including a new emphasis on motion controls when played on the television.

Neither Nintendo, nor third parties, has mastered how to make motion controls work perfectly on the Switch, but the trailer at least makes it clear that the game should play just as well with a Pro Controller or while in portable mode. Aiming by pointing the Joy-Con at the screen also seems like one of the few ways that motion controls could make the game better, rather than just different. It’s a control method that worked better than expected in the Switch version of World of Goo, for instance.

But it’s been an uphill battle on the Switch in general.

“Needing to create motion controls that just work, whether the Joy-Cons are attached or unattached to the tablet, software designers have begun to compromise,” we explained in a prior story. “Some solutions kind of, sort of, help. Action games like Splatoon 2 and The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild have leveraged motion controls to make up for the limitations of the hardware’s imprecise analog sticks. The player physically aims the Switch at their target on screen, moving the hardware around the real world like a window into an alternate one.”

Resident Evil: Revelations and Resident Evil: Revelations 2 will both be released on Nov. 28 for Nintendo Switch, and will cost $19.99 each.

It’s not going to be the next Resident Evil 7: Biohazard, that’s for sure, but hopefully it will still be an exciting and slightly more frightening experience compared to last time.

Be sure to check out the trailer below!

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