I discovered the Switch port’s best feature by accident: By pressing the left movement stick twice, you can bring up the cheats menu. Even so, it feels a bit egregious that it took two weeks for Aspyr to fix a game-breaking bug that prevented players from being able to even complete the game. Such problems would give plenty of cause to walk away from most Switch games, but as a seasoned KotOR 2 player I’ve come to expect these bugs as the cost of admission to Obsidian’s obtuse, messy, and broken galaxy. I am disappointed, but not surprised, that the Switch port will randomly crash for no apparent reason, or loop a scene repeatedly until I give up and reset the game in hopes it won’t loop next time. So it’s hard to get too mad about Aspyr’s just-released Nintendo Switch port for being a buggy mess. Back when I played the PC version, you had to install a content restoration mod just to view a ton of plot-critical cutscenes. It withholds the gentle nostalgia evoked by the most recent Legos Star Wars game, and I respect it for demanding my scepticism of its narrative.įirst released in 2004, KotOR 2 only had a year of development time, which resulted in a ton of cut content and technical issues compared to its relatively stable predecessor. Instead of fully committing itself to space-western fantasy like its BioWare-made predecessor, KotOR 2 is a razor-sharp interrogation of whether the Star Wars universe needs to exist at all. What happens when the Force no longer favours you? Can you survive when you walk away from being the chosen one? KotOR 2 shows you the dead, unbeating heart of an endlessly vast and uncaring galaxy. Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II – The Sith Lords is a horror story.
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