

This easily apparent when looking at the ground, walls and even the sky. Here, Dragon’s Crown Pro has an extremely sharp look, thanks to all the assets being presented at a much higher resolution. Gone is the muddled look from the PlayStation 3 due to the 720p resolution being upscaled to 1080p. While in dungeons, torches on the wall light up the way, small creatures cross the ground and waters glisten as you cross them. In the city, you’ll see NPCs carrying on with their daily chores. Backdrops come to life with strolling skyboxes, subtle touches like the grass and bushes blowing in the wind. Thanks to the enhancements with the PS4 version the game is even more visually striking. I’ve fired up my PS3 to play it again and to compare it against this version. I don’t know how, but they did.ĭragon’s Crown was a visually amazing game back on the PlayStation 3 and honestly, it still is.

They took something that was already perfect and improved on it. If you’re familiar with what Vanillaware did with their remaster of Odin’s Sphere on the PlayStation 4.This exactly what they’ve done with Dragon’s Crown Pro. Faster loading times, a remastered soundtrack, several options not available in the PS3 version. While the game is a 1:1 copy of the original game, there’s so much more that has been added to the game. The short answer is that the game is a remaster. I believe I heard the cheering of thousands of fans crying out in disbelief, all at once. That is until a remastered version of the game, Dragon’s Crown Pro, was announced at the 2017 PlayStation Experience event. Meaning that a lot of gamers were out of luck. Out of those options, Dragon’s Crown was not available on the latter. Gamers looking to play their PlayStation 3 titles had to resort to either owning the previous console, purchasing one if they sold it/traded it in or play and pay for them again via PlayStation Now. Though as you’re likely aware, Sony kinda of dropped the ball with that.

Gamers have been asking for this particular title to get the backward compatibility work for some time.

Which is also the main issue with the title. It’s easily one of the best games available for the PlayStation 3. It combined a fierce combat system, online/offline co-operative gameplay and featured enough content that gamers are still falling in love with it. That game was known as Dragon’s Crown and it went on to become a cult classic among the masses. Back in August 2013, Atlus and Vanillaware released the godly 2D side-scrolling title that captured the feel of Dungeons and Dragons onto the PlayStation 3.
