

Combining real life historical events with dark fantasy and folklore, face off against bloodthirsty warlords and otherworldly demons. Summary: Steel your mind and ready your blade for an intense action RPG experience set in bloody Sengoku era Japan. For more details on how the base Nioh 2 experience fares, check out our review here. Generally favorable reviews based on 59 Ratings. The PC version should be worth checking out since it supports Ultrawide monitors, HDR and 120 FPS gameplay. On the other hand, Nioh Remastered – The Complete Edition does get a snazzy new Photo Mode, exclusive to PS5.Īlong with The Nioh Collection on PS5, Nioh 2 – The Complete Edition will also release for PS4 and PC tomorrow. Other features include cross-play and save transfer for Nioh 2 players on PS4 and PS5 along with a free upgrade option (which sadly doesn’t apply to Nioh 1). Check out the launch trailer in the meantime to see them in action.Īlong with their base campaigns, both remasters include all of their respective expansion packs. It includes Nioh Remastered – The Complete Edition and Nioh 2 Remastered – The Complete Edition with both titles supporting 4K/60 FPS and 120 FPS gameplay. like you pointed out physical=wholesale for first party*#copies (almost all in their pocket)+ royalties #copies for third parties (all in their pocket).Team Ninja and Koei Tecmo are bringing double the Nioh action to PS5 players when The Nioh Collection launches tomorrow. They definitely make more money off of digital games, but physical sales aren't anywhere near as low as the 5.5% you mentioned.ġ)he did 16.5M/302.4M = 5.5% but that 302.4 includes Add-on Content of 184.8 of that 302.4 that only makes sense if you assume a) people that buy physical copies don't buy add-ons which is an insane assumptionī) people won't buy the physical copy but still buy the add-on which is an equally insane assumption2)they make more revenue, profit is questionable. But Sony knows the exact price of every game sold on PlayStation Store so the digital revenue includes all games. Sony has no way of knowing the price that third-party games were sold for on disc so that number only includes first-party games and the licensing fees for third-party games on disc. You left an important note off of the table:
