Editor's Note: As this is our first 'Nintendo Switch 2 Edition' review (and with many more to come, potentially), we want to outline their focus from the off.
Our existing reviews — in this case for Breath of the Wild, both the DLC — are still live and relevant. If you're coming to this game fresh, we recommend you look back at those first. Our NS2 Edition reviews will focus on new features and upgrades, evaluating what they add to the original experience, and whether they're worth your time - and they will be scored accordingly.

Despite how monumentally groundbreaking The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild was on the Switch (and the Wii U, for that matter), there’s no denying that the game struggled ever-so-slightly under the weight of its ambitions. A quick trip into Korok Forest confirms as much, with the frame rate plummeting at frequent intervals.
Thankfully, it was never enough to ruin what was one of the greatest games of all time. But in the lead up to the Switch 2’s announcement, there was definitely a part of me that wondered just what BOTW could be like on beefier hardware.
I need not fantasise anymore, because Breath of the Wild - Nintendo Switch 2 Edition is here, and it's absolutely glorious. Offered up via either a paid upgrade or as part of a Switch Online + Expansion Pack subscription, this update boasts enhanced resolution of up to 4K (1080p in handheld), rock-solid 60fps frame rate throughout, faster load times, an extra save file, and... the rather terrible Zelda Notes mobile app.

Okay, let's start with the positives, of which there are many. Thanks to the boost in resolution and frame rate, the Switch 2 version of BOTW is the best way to play a modern classic. There's no going back, folks, this is it.
From the moment you exit the Shrine of Resurrection and gaze across the horizon, the improvements are immediately apparent. Mountains and trees in the distance are now significantly clearer with gorgeous detail, and swinging the camera around reveals just how unfathomably smooth the performance is.
I'm not kidding, there wasn't a moment for me when the frame rate faltered. Whether I lobbed a bomb into a Bokoblin camp littered with exploding barrels, pranced around Korok Forest, parried an attack from a Guardian, or whatever else the game could chuck at me, it all ran flawlessly. Nintendo did the best with the hardware it had back in 2017, but the Switch 2 Edition represents BOTW at its absolute finest.

Of course, with the enhancements and the natural age of time, some textures are starting to look a little long in the tooth - rocks big and small, mainly, but since the world is absolutely littered with the things, you'll notice it quite a bit. It's a minor quibble, of course, and the game largely still looks incredible thanks to the absurd scale and beautiful art design.
With such robust performance enhancements, you'd think load times might take a bit of a hit, but it's actually quite the opposite. Thanks to the Switch 2's extra power, loading screens are now much zippier than ever before. Granted, you're still looking at around five or six seconds when teleporting or entering a shrine, so it's hardly instantaneous, but it's a lot quicker.
So, from a technical standpoint, BOTW is much improved. This is the same game you know and love, but now better-looking and smoother than you ever thought possible. If you want to experience the enhancements from the start of the game without getting rid of your original progress, you can – the Switch 2 Edition introduces a second save file, which might sound somewhat inconsequential on paper, but it's a lifesaver for those who want a fresh start but are hesitant to overwrite their save.

Nintendo didn't stop there, though. Oh no. You've also got a bunch of extra content, too! The catch, however, is that it's not in the game itself, but rather via the Zelda Notes hub stored within the Nintendo Switch mobile app. And, to put it bluntly, it's naff.
To give credit where it's due, the ability to sync up your gameplay almost perfectly to the app is actually quite impressive. It knows exactly where you are in the environment, and this in turn allows you to use a couple of interesting features.
The first of these — and perhaps the most significant — is 'Voice Memories', which features voice work from Patricia Summerset as Princess Zelda to provide bits of history and anecdotes on a whole bunch of landmarks littered throughout Hyrule. Discovering these hinges on a beeping sound via the app that indicates how close you are to a Voice Memory, kind of like how the Sheikah Sensor works for Shrines. You can turn this off if it gets annoying (which it does – very quickly), but then you have to keep glancing at your phone to monitor a little yellow flashing symbol.

Honestly, the Voice Memories themselves, while perfectly harmless, aren't interesting or vital enough to warrant having to put up with the incessant beeping or looking at your phone all the time. I play games to switch off from the outside world, so having a constant reminder that my phone is there is borderline infuriating. Either put this stuff in the game itself, or don't bother.
Elsewhere, the Navigation feature lets you locate specific characters or structures in the world, like Koroks and Shrines. Chances are that if you've been playing BOTW since 2017 you've probably already found everything worth searching for. For everyone else, this is basically a way to achieve 100% completion. Like the Voice Memories, you can activate a voiceover to point you in the right direction, but having a repetitive voice that sounds like a sat nav in a traditional fantasy setting is horrendously jarring.
You've also got a Daily Bonus feature, acting as a roulette wheel to grant you various perks, like weapon repairs and meals. I've got nothing against this, as it's essentially like activating an amiibo without actually having to grab an amiibo. You can also view play data, tinker around with in-game photos, and even exchange items with other players.

If you find yourself using and enjoying Zelda Notes, then that's wonderful – more power to you. But I just couldn't get on with it at all. The very notion of using a smartphone to access bonus features completely yanked me out of what is otherwise an all-encoming experience. Voice Memories, Navigation, and even the Daily Bonus features could have all been implemented in the game itself, and honestly, Zelda Notes' only saving grace is that it's not enabled automatically. Just leave it be.
Conclusion
Zelda: Breath of the Wild - Nintendo Switch 2 Edition is undoubtedly the best way to play one of the greatest games of all time. The visual and performance enhancements remove any issues that you may have had to endure with the original game. It's practically flawless from that perspective.
Sadly, the Zelda Notes app really brings the whole thing down. Useful features that should have been implemented in-game have been relegated to your smartphone, and using it completely breaks immersion in this incredible world. I'm only thankful that it's not even remotely mandatory. Leave Zelda Notes to one side, and you've got the definitive presentation of a modern classic.
Comments 113
Man I thought Zelda Notes was pretty neat.
So an 10 out of 10 game gets enhancements that improve it but drops the score to 8 out of 10? I am genuinely surprised considering it’s the “best way to play the game”. Even if you don’t like Zelda Notes you don’t have to use that feature, and that and the “aging textures” seems like small complaints to deduct 2 whole points from it.
I'm well into Zelda notes. Can't believe it knocked 2 points off the score and it's not even the game lol! (What is going on here lol!)
score is for the upgrades - not the full game
Are previously released DLCs included for free?
@Darthmoogle I could be wrong, but I think the 8/10 refers to the update, not the game as a whole. Obviously BotW will always be a GOAT.
Yeah, I completely disagree with the Zelda notes opinion.
The problem is that both Zelda games use dynamic resolution.
So when I migrated my Zelda games to the Switch 2 and tested them out, it already looked a bit better due to upscaling.
Then when I ed the Switch 2 versions, I barely noticed any difference at all.
So it was a bare minimal effort and a total rip-off. You just paying 10 bucks for that stupid app. Which should have been a free addition for both versions. There is no reason why it wouldn't work for Switch 1 s.
Just goes to show Nintendo more and more tries to sur Sony with their greed!
It's the same with the Pro controllers! There is ZERO reason as to why the old Pro controllers can't wake up the Switch 2, other than Nintendo's greed to force people into buying the much more expensive new Switch Pro 2 controller.
@MamaSymphonia That is correct. But IMO the title is misleading. If what in the disclaimer is true then it should have been "Features and Upgrades" Review. Even if the "Nintendo Switch 2 Edition" is in the review title it still implies the entire game. Especially for people who are diving in the first time.
I got a tablet so I will put all the Switch Zelda notes on that so it's bigger to see and hear.
Does this plug into a Switch 1 and work? Reason I ask, I don’t have this game for the Switch (I played it on Wii U), and I was thinking of getting it, but at some point in the future I’ll get a Switch 2 and want to benefit from the Switch 2 upgrades.
I know I can upgrade the Switch 1 version of the game, but I like that this has the upgrade on the cart.
Honestly not going to bother with this, I don't think anyway. The 60fps would be lovely but from what I understand you get a stable framerate playing on switch2 anyway. Ive made this comment elsewhere, the higher resolution makes it too clean. For me it seems to strip something magical, it feels like instead of playing in a painting you now playing in a game world. I'm sure it sounds silly saying the higher resolution isn't as good and any other game I'd surely agree, but I really felt the lose in atmosphere when seeking out the higher resolution videos to see how it looked.
Also, I have no interest in the Zelda Notes stuff really, the commentary stuff would be cool ittedly, but I'm more than fine without it.
@Zyph It specifically says at the start that this is for the features and upgrades and if you're diving in for the first time, read the actual review of the game. It even links to the reviews.
I have to say this is a poor review! Same great game as before but 8 out of 10! Nintendolife who has reviewed this.
@Vyacheslav333 no, though if you already purchased them for switch 1 you can access it
I can definitely wait on getting the Zelda games, they'll be around for a while so I got no sense of urgency.
Do we know if the base games perform better fps-wise on the Switch 2? I'm not interested in the upgrade packs
@DennyCrane That's the point. It doesn't look clean and sharp at all. It still has that blurry atmospheric haze and why you don't see much difference between Switch 1 and 2 version at all. Also the textures don't do it any favors.
@FredBiletnikoff I did say they did so in the disclaimer. The first part was their disclaimer. I was talking about the review title.
And yes I read the entire article, thanks. Apologies if my point didn't get across.
The game itself looks absolutely beautiful now. Fully realised and it’s awful going back to the Switch version. The difference in Frame Rate is especially damming.
Haven’t bothered with Notes. I don’t need to be looking at my Phone when I’m trying to play a game.
Very weird choice to have extra features use a phone, unless they just want to promote their app. The voice acting for Zelda was always prettying annoying, so I don't feel the need to listen to that. The performance and resolution improvements are tempting, but I don't feel a strong need to go back to BOTW or TOTK just yet when there are so many other things to play.
You can really see the IGN effect in this review. Score a great game lower on purpose for clicks. Real high 8/10 too much water fibe in this review.
So basically… this is still a 10/10 experience, but the review is looking at this edition as an overall package as presented on Switch 2.
The new (optional) Smart Phone apps weren’t put in the game which is a shame, and the improved resolution and performance shows up the original aged textures? That’s what I gathered.
I figure a point got negated due to ToTK now existing as well.
@Jeronan I really noticed the difference with the 4k to be honest and it really put me off. It felt so sharp and as you and Ollie stated the textures of rocks etc look worse for it, creating a weird mix of sharpness and blurry. Either way, I'm fine without and with a stable 30fps thats more than enough for me.
I thought as much. Game looks gorgeous on Switch 2 but having content locked behind as app is ass backwards.
Sorry but I hope they get all these “updated Switch 1” games out of the way pretty quick. I at least hope they aren’t devoting much manpower to them. For a company that already relies heavily on remakes over and over, releasing games 2-5 years after the original with pretty (IMO) minimal updates just doesn’t interest me at all. But I know a lot of others care more than me about frame rate, resolution, etc
Zelda notes is cool, and knocking 2 points off of the score for it is redick.
@Darthmoogle it's a review of the upgrade only. Not the game as a whole.
@Corrupted Nintendo are Nintendo, I see. 😂
I haven't gotten tired of Voice notes. It's in Latam Spanish for me, but anyway.
Weird to score a game negatively based on something that, you guess it, is optional and not in the game.
This game was probably the best experience for me in gaming since Ocarina of Time when it first came
out, put hundreds of hours into it. Shame that Tears of the Kingdom just didn’t have that same feeling for me.
I think Zelda Notes is neat.
Like the DS second screen. 😅
@Darthmoogle Don't use logic here XD
Well I hope it looks better when you’re playing it than it does in these screenshots because they look just as blurry as Switch 1.
Read the opening paragraphs people ffs. That is not the score for the game, but for the upgrade value. Their original BotW score still stands.
At any rate what the hell is wrong with those screenshots? Why are they looking so blurry? Even my Switch 1 version looks better than that.
@Jeronan
The new pro controller is a lot better than the old one, though. The stick quality alone is best in the market.
I took this upgrade as a good excuse to restart it from scratch today and I'm loving it, both in docked and portable modes. For some reason I don't know, I find that the framerate improvements somehow boost its "Miyazaki effect". I'm still sure the texture resolution could have been made more consistent tho, but there's time to improve that too.
Anyway, so far, I've been ignoring this Zelda Notes thingy, afterall it's annoying to look at two screens when they both aren't right in front of you. Moreover, I hate when games drain your phone battery.
So I'll either keep ignoring this thingy or just load it onto my tablet, but I have some doubts about the latter.
Removed - unconstructive
If anyone is playing this on the Switch 2 without the upgrade pack and could comment on if it's noticeably enhanced as is, I would appreciate it.
Unless I'm reading it wrong, I gather Nintendo have upgraded the game to 4K/60 by default with the pack, and without it'll just upscale to 4K and probably run at 60 with the better hardware behind it.
Sounds like this pack is potentially a waste unless you're interested in Zelda Notes.
@JAGleics Didn't read the article and just jumped to the score, eh?
They should have sold the app for $10, and just upgrade the game for free as the other ones.
To me the story and voice acting is so bad in this game that i could not care less for more memories (And Zelda should be bad ass, but she does not sound the part at all, worst thing in the game imo. So I do not want to listen any more to her if I can avoid it )
But it's still my favorite game of all time so if I'm paying for any upgrade I guess it's this one... but this will hurt.
@GravyThief Surprisingly it does. Says so on the back of the box. Pretty cool!
This also shows that the Wii U had a good thing going with the second screen being for extra features. Add to that the fact that the Wii U is still way more comfortable than the Switch 1 and 2 (yet, 2 is not comfy, spent time with it this morning and got annoyed just like with the Switch 1).
@Jeronan
Yeah I did think that’s was really bad of Nintendo not letting the original switch pro controller wake up the switch 2.
Some of their greed lately you could really scream and shout at them, not that we get the chance.
I was daft enough to get the new switch 2 pro controller, but it is very good in hand and really nice to have.
The better resolution is good but the 60fps is the icing on the cake so smooth and not much blur now when panning around.
It is a nice upgrade.
I hope all Nintendo in house games will have 60fps on Swtich 2.
@Medic_alert Thank you. So do we think Nintendo are locking a few settings behind a paid patch? Unless I missed it, I didn't see anything in this mini review to say Nintendo have improved the textures.
Game looks fine to me, maybe the TV you use sucks lol
My experience with this game happily lived and ended on the Wii U
Just adding the second save file is a game changer (but, its absence until now is mind boggling). I’ve put way too much time into this game to erase my save file, but I wanted to re-experience it from the start. It looks glorious too. Love this!
I thought zelda notes was rather neat. It's certainly better than pausing your game to look at youtube guides. Gamers like to complain about things breaking immersion but face it if you have kids, a significant other of any kind or obligations something is guaranteed to break your immersion. Might as well lock yourself in a room for a month and cut off all with the outside world while playing or you're just not gonna enjoy yourself.
I a Nintendo power review of OOT that said say goodbye to family and friends before you play LOL!
Crazy that for so long these games were considered “good enough” to Nintendo fans and when Xbox or PlayStation s commented on the resolution or frame rate they were mocked as graphics whores. Now the reason to buy a switch 2 is for the graphics. Times are changing I guess.
@JAGleics its not poor is just his opinion.
Again, if the only thing nintendo did is increase a resolution and fps with no textures, shadows.. than the best way to play botw is still an emulator not the switch 2 (mods, cheats......)
Man i love the Zelda notes app. Use it alot. Also to share items with my friends is awesome!
Zelda notes helps me find the last 20 Shrines in TotK that are hidden in all these obnoxious caves. I am quite pleased with Zelda notes.
I think the Zelda notes looks fun. I guess they're not for everyone.
@JackieCMarlow If you're assuming they knocked two points off the score for having two cons, then you'd also have to assume that joys are worth one point each as well. Which means that, with six Joys and two Cons, this review score would have been...a four out of ten. So clearly that's not what they're doing.
@Olliemar28
I think a portion of people only read the Conclusion, Joys, Cons and Score of the review.
And for these, the Switch 2 Edition Conclusion, Joys, Cons and Score could be rather misleading and confusing.
It does not get less confusing as just below the Score one find these two:
1. "Scoring Policy". Wich focus on games as a whole, and not the new parts of an update.
2. A poll: "What score would you give The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild - Nintendo Switch 2 Edition (Switch 2)?"
"Please note voting will score the game in your games collection"
With the wording of the poll and the fact the score is added to ones game collection I think most or many people will vote what they think of the game as a whole and not just what they think of the "updated" parts - regardsless if they read the whole review and understood this was a review for the updated parts only.
An idea:
I suggest putting the text you have at the top under the Conlusion headline, maybe in cursive:
"Our existing reviews — in this case for Breath of the Wild, both the Wii U and Switch versions, and the DLC — are still live and relevant. If you're coming to this game fresh, we recommend you look back at those first. Our NS2 Edition reviews will focus on new features and upgrades, evaluating what they add to the original experience, and whether they're worth your time - and they will be scored accordingly."
Another idea:
Why not have two scores at the bottom?
One score for the game as a whole.
One score for the updated parts alone.
It would bring total clarity to the Switch 2 version reviews.
Also it could stop Switch 2 version games from ranking unfairly low in review lists on nintendolife. Especially for people who are new to the games and did not play them on Switch 1.
@Jeronan I’m sorry but you are blind if you don’t see a difference.
Cheers for the review. Even if it turned out to be very oddly scored. Good read.
Seems some folks didn't actually READ the text at the beginning of the review. They're only reviewing the Switch 2 additions, not the entire game.
I'll probably play around with the upgrades in both BotW and TotK when I eventually buy a Switch 2. Zelda Notes actually doesn't sound like a negative to me, though I do agree that the feature should have been wrapped into the main game. Using my phone that way will be a little jarring, but I'm a sucker for facts in series I like too.
The voice notes is pretty cool and helped me find the last well i was missing and currently finishing the caves, I just wish the voice would have like a minute delay. I know go north!!!
another reason not to buy a switch 2 and this point i may just skip switch and wait till the next console if there even is one...but im not paying 450 dollars for this and than 90 dollars for games and 60 dollars for a camera nah im ing this gen
@FredBiletnikoff well it says zelda breath of the wild switch 2 review. So maybe the title needs changing.
@JAGleics didn't even read the comments about the review
I’ve enjoyed the Zelda notes and stats, even if you don’t I don’t see how an improvement and updated version is now an 8/10. This site gets worse and worse everyday.
I voted poor because to do any of the new stuff, you need a damned smartphone.
I've been against this since they announced it!
@Vyacheslav333
No
@Darthmoogle Good lord, read the first two paragraphs.
I haven’t played BOTW but the Tears update is really really good. Tears has better texture work anyway so the resolution jump i imagine is less jarring.
I’m not going to parrot what the various reasons people have laid out about giving a 10 out of a 10 game an 8 due to things that only increase QoL (which I do think is absurd) BUT I do just want to chime in and say I get why people wanna say BotW is GOAT. However, as an old school gamer nothing will EVER beat that feeling and experience playing Ocarina of Time for the first time when it was released. That game moved mountains in the gaming world as far as impact is concerned. Wind Waker is my personal fav Zelda of all time but I can’t ignore the greatness and impact Ocarina was.
@HingryHuppo it doesn't, what should have happened is we should have gotten a botw complete edition for Switch 2 for 50 bucks which is the standard for almost all publishers when publishing a 5+ year old game (botw is 7 years old) to a new system. Now to get the game with all dlc for switch 2 you gotta pay 80$+20$ =100$ for the complete edition
@OthmaneAD Nintendo is ridiculous and they know suckers will pay for it.
@LinktotheFuture thanks for confirming!
@SabreLevant I imagine the non-upgraded versions would be at a stable 30fps like other Switch 1 games that haven’t gotten updates.
@GravyThief You are welcome!
8/10 for BotW is wild, and on a Nintendo website.
Easily one of my favourite games ever, and I know that’s a very popular opinion.
I also thought Zelda Notes was pretty neat, especially for something that it completely optional and additive.
@Darthmoogle you didn’t read the review then?
@Ajent Read the actual review! 🤦🏼♂️
@WhiteUmbrella Lol right? Such a fascinating group. "OMG you guys didnt slap a 10 on Zelda?!? But its Nintendo!!" 🤣
BoTW single handedly killed 30+ years of being a huge Zelda fan for me. It is NOT a Zelda game, just bland open world slop with some Zelda assets sprinkled in.
There's really no reason they couldn't have put the stuff from the app in-game via a new menu option. But ultimately it just feels like they wanted a way to charge for BOTW & TOTK's upgrades knowing how popular they were.
Sounds like the reviewer here was really salty about those Notes.
-2 Points, lol.
Glad I waited this long to play Breath of the Wild and Tears of the Kingdom!
@sixrings Gamers and hypocrisy go hand in hand.
I didnt get this on my first transfer over to the new console with my SD card and I guess this was one of many games I left on system memory of Switch 1. Am I going to have to factory reset to be able to try again? If so, Nintendo should of made a guide for the process because that’s ridiculous.
great review, ollie! looks absolutely stunning on switch 2 😍
@SpontaneousOutburst open world slop?!! alright guys lets look at allll the professional reviews who rated BOTW higher than 9. its hard to deny it revelutionized zelda and even the genre forever.
also i feel so honored for being called fascinating 😝😝😝
No master mode or extra DLC
The omission of the 7 year old DLC makes this such a hard .
I'm happy to double-dip on TOTK, but I won't triple-dip on BOTW until it's available with the DLC on the cart.
So an optional gimmick feature tanked the score that much? Meanwhile the features that people care about: Better frames, resolution, and reduced load times is present. Yeah still a 10/10 for me chief.
@Darthmoogle The score is for this version. Everyone knows the game is still fantastic, but this upgrade doesn't justify the price they ask for it.
If it was for free, I bet it would've scored higher... Even though it doesn't even include the DLC! Terrible thing they did here.
A paid upgrade that only improves resolution and framerate (logical improvements in a new hardware). The Zelda Notes is worthless and the DLC is missing... This should have been for free.
Definitely agree with the score. Well donde, Nintendo Life!
@Ajent This score is for the version of an 8 years old game. It's not worth the price they ask for it, that's all. Of course the game is still fantastic, but this version could have been better.
If at least the DLC was included...
@OctolingKing13 There's been a bit of a trend around these parts recently for s that magically appear out of nowhere with contrarian and snarky takes.
Even on its own merits I'd probably not give BotW more than like a 7 honestly. I like it plenty but it has a lot of readily evident issues (dungeons are trash bags, the combat is very repetitive because the game only has like six types of enemies, everything about upgrading equipment is super grindy, there isn't really any endgame content anywhere near hard enough to make bothering to get fully upgraded actually worth the effort, the motion control segments are universally terrible, the story's very thin and yet very dull, everything about how the Korok Seeds are implemented is a mess, Master Mode is a poorly balanced chore more designed to waste your time than anything) and the only 3D Zelda games I don't enjoy more than it are TotK and maybe Skyward Sword.
But then again I think 5 should be the baseline for, "Yeah, this game is fine," instead of treating it like anything below 9.975 is slop like most people for some reason do.
Does anyone know why BOTW's Upgrade Pack takes over 11GB while TOTK's is sitting at only 4.3GB? Really puzzled by that.
@OrtadragoonX Yeah I haven't tried BOTW yet either, but TOTK looks beautiful on my LG TV, and experiencing firsthand the change to a buttery smooth 60fps feels amazing in motion.
I know it's cool to hate on BotW now, but it's one of my favorites of all time. I associate it with the Army finally getting me the benefits I needed and getting out of homelessness, so it helps, lol.
It's a vacation..a great place to just disappear.
↑ This was at the top and now it’s at the bottom and yet a significant number of people will somehow not manage to read or comprehend it.
@SurprisedRobinChu
Personally, I’m absolutely loving the Zelda Notes feature. I feel like it’s revived my interest in shrine/korok seed hunting.
Still the better of the two Switch ganes.
BOTW gave you a limited set of tools and said ‘use your ingenuity to solve problems’ and it’s glorious.
TOTK gives you an even better set of tools and said ‘use this conveniently placed pile of planks of wood to solve problems’. It ruined the entire experience for me.
People really are total ludites...
Have you all no appetite for cool and interesting ways of doing things?
I think the phone app's awesome!
"Burying"... Pfff
@FredBiletnikoff I did ?!? I don’t know what it is about my comment that indicates otherwise. I checked, and I’ve definitely commented under the correct article. Not quite sure why that’s a ‘facepalm’ for you.
@the_beaver That’s a fair comment. I already had the DLC and I have NSO, so it hasn’t cost me anything extra, so I guess the ‘cost’ aspect never crossed my mind. Thanks.
@Maxz we can comprehend. However many things are misleading. This is nintendos flagship game and says a switch 2 review. But yet why are zelda notes even taken into . As that's not the game that's added bonus. Maybe NintendoLife should change the title.
@Ajent Because it's not a review of the game. If you'd read it you would know that. It's a review of the the new features and upgrades only.
@JAGleics This the third time but…
The entire thing is an ‘added bonus’. It’s the ‘added bonuses’ (i.e. ‘new features and upgrades’) on top of the original that are the subject of this review.
@FredBiletnikoff I did read it. You’re incredibly condescending. The review is titled in a way indicating that it is a review of the game. There is a line stating that it will FOCUS on the additions of the Switch 2 edition. Having a focus on something does not mean that it is entirely and ONLY centred on that focus.
I appreciate the other comment, pointing out that it offers a different perspective from a value prospect, hence the lower than expected score - reviews are subjective, I get it.
But if we were face to face having this conversation, I doubt you be so rude.
@Ajent The reason it appears I'm being condescending is despite it being very clear what the score for this is about because the editor told you, and also the fact that it has been clarified by many people in the comments, you've just ignored it completely.
If you look at my first comment explaining this to someone, there was no facepalm or anything but since your comment was after it had been explained so often, I was understandably frustrated.
You have also conveniently left out part of your quote about it being a focus. "evaluating what they add to the original experience, and whether they're worth your time - and they will be scored accordingly." The score is about what they add, not the game as a whole.
I don't particularly care about scores myself as the contents of reviews are what actually matters, but it does seem excessive to give the contents of this upgrade a "Great 8/10" and not higher considering that this is literally the best way to play Breath of the Wild officially and that Zelda Notes is completely optional if you aren't interested in it for whatever reason (personally, I'm looking forward to it, especially its Voice Memories, no matter if it's a smartphone app etc.) - that said, thanks for the review anyway!
@Vyacheslav333 nope, they said that is a separate purchase.
I already have the game on Wii u, so I might just watch the voice-memories online. As for the second save-file: Doesn't the reviewer know you can just make a second profile, so you can have a second save-file?
Finally took the time to boot up BOTW today and played for a few hours, and I've got to say. All this talk of muddy ground textures is overblown. Rocks look fine, walls look great, bushes and trees look good, and overall this game looks incredible in 60fps and crisp resolution.
I agree however that the Upgrade Pack was phoned in. None of TOTK's QoL improvements like item holding, recipes, and improved physics made it into the game. They simply tweaked the performance settings and overlayed Zelda Notes.
I get it; Nintendo wanted a Zelda experience technically ready to go for Switch 2's launch, but I still wish they had pushed back these two Switch 2 Editions and took their time with remastering the games from the ground up. Add in TOTK's hugely improved physics engine, add in TOTK's quality of life subtleties, at least take the time to swap in TOTK's improved assets, etc.
However, despite those shortcomings, getting to experience two of the greatest games of all time with near-perfect performance feels both amazing and relieving. We can finally experience these two Zelda behemoths with ideal performance, and that is still an achievement for the industry.
I've been mostly focused on Welcome Tour, Mario Kart World, and a play-through of Pokemon Violet (I previously played Scarlet on the Switch 1; the performance difference on the Switch 2 is like night and day, and am enjoying it much more), so I haven't delved too deeply into the enhanced BOTW.
But I did boot it up and run around BOTW for a bit to see how it looks, and the increased fluidity was very apparent on my TV! There's certainly a fresh BOTW play-through in my future. Also, I feel BOTW and TOTK will both greatly benefit from the extra buttons on the back on the Pro 2 controller or the joy con charging grip for customizing the controls, and I look forward to using the notes feature.
For a paid and not free update, have to say not that impressed, as the pop in is seemingly no different. When you glide from a tower, and head towards a fortification with loads of enemies on it, the fortification STILL looks empty until you are practically on top of it, then all the enemies magically appear. Classic Nintendo laziness, surely the Switch 2 could have handed this?
I'm enjoying my time with BOTW again, and the Zelda Notes app stuff is excellent. I don't mind at all that it's on my phone. I just keep it on the couch armrest next to me, or mounted in a tablet stand where I can easily see and reach it. I use it mostly for the voice memos, and tracking down Koroks in the area. I've already completed the game twice--less getting all of the Koroks (regular and Master mode). I don't think I would ever simply wander the world in case I might find a stray Korok, but I'm happy to use the app guidance to find any in each area as I go through it. Sometimes I just see it on the map and go find it, other times I use the voice directions.
Let's face it: no one is going to find all 900 Koroks without some sort of guide. Not without constantly wearing the Korok mask and doing a grid search. And this guide is context aware. Personally, I didn't like wearing that mask because it prevents you from traveling with a full stealth bonus and you have to switch in and out of it all of the time.
This game was more impactful in 2017. I don't see myself going back to this one.
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