

Most games take advantage of this by designing the icons for their games to look simple and cool on this dashboard. The Vita’s main hub menu, where you can find all of your downloaded games, apps and more, has a sleek and Apple-inspired design. The first clue I had that something was off was the dashboard icon for the game. We never got around to covering it here on Rely, but now that we’re starting a new year, it’s time to change that and get some (very late) official word on our opinion of Capcom’s port of Revelations 2 to the handheld market.

A few months later, Capcom brought the horror-action title to handheld with a release on PlayStation Vita, making it the first new title to be released on one of Sony’s handheld systems, despite the long-awaited (and canceled) Resident Evil: Portable. Lots of little tweaks and changes really made the current gen release the best version to own. The atmosphere and detail was really realized in the current gen version, and the lovely 60fps was a real treat after being locked before.

I originally purchased it episode to episode on PlayStation 3 and then upgraded to the retail version on Xbox One later- and the huge leap graphically was awesome. It still hadn’t quite captured that old school RE spirit, but it was easily the closest we’d gotten in years. I loved Resident Evil Revelations 2 when it released earlier last year.
