![]() It's not a cutting-edge game but it looks visually pleasing. Anti-aliasing is not used, however, but due to the nature of the texture work, shimmering is kept to a minimum. The Wii's colour dithering is eliminated entirely and overall image quality is hugely improved. Watch on YouTube The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword HD - this is the Digital Foundry tech review, produced by John Linneman. For Switch, we're running at a fixed 1080p resolution (720p while docked) with a virtually flawless 60fps performance level, marred only by heavy alpha effects - explosions and particles - that only present very rarely. On Wii, Skyward Sword is limited by its 480p output and reduced colour depth, leading to obvious dithering artefacts throughout. Some assets have been re-worked, the entire UI is new and image quality is hugely improved. In bringing Skyward Sword to the Switch, Nintendo has opted to maintain the look and feel of the original game while introducing visual tweaks and changes where it makes sense. ![]() The graphics are improved but really, it's the quality of life improvements that strip out the frustrations and frictions with the original game, letting the core design shine. 10 years on, Skyward Sword HD is an opportunity to re-evaluate the game - and for me at least, it has finally clicked. Many believed the game was stuck in the past, a derivative of the Ocarina of Time formula, and the new waggle controls failed to push the series forward. A controversial release - even at launch - The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword first released on Wii, arriving at the tail-end of the firm's contentious motion control period. ![]()
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