collection is a huge get, personally, as the franchise has been trapped on 360/PS3, along with PC versions that have problems running on Windows 10 (and the first game being kind of annoying to buy). Overall, a damn good day to be a horror fan on Xbox. I should also mention that FPS boosts are also coming to a number of Xbox Cloud games, including: ORC is sort of a guilty pleasure, so I’m happy that it’s getting a little special treatment here. I’m especially excited to see the boost applied to Resident Evil: Operation Raccoon City, as that game suffers from some serious framerate issues. The horror (and horror adjacent) games included are: Along with this rollout of new games, there are also quite a few of these, along with games already available, that are receiving FPS boosts on Xbox Series systems. FILES (Extraction Point and Perseus Mandate Expansion Packs)Įxcluding Manhunt (which is playable on PS4/5 natively), this will be the first time these titles are playable on current-gen systems without the need for streaming (and in Binary Domain, Onechanbara, and F.E.A.R.‘s case, at all). The full list of horror (along with a few horror-adjacent) titles are: While the grand majority of the list is non-horror (full of classics like the Max Payne trilogy and Red Dead Revolver), there are a bunch of horror titles that I’m over the moon to hear are part of this release. During today’s Xbox 20th Anniversary stream, however, it was announced a new lineup of over 70 classic titles will be hitting Xbox Backwards Compatability starting today. It was pretty awesome, but sadly left a lot of great titles out, with a huge chunk of the Xbox 360’s horror library left behind. It’s been two years since Xbox ended its Backwards Compatability program, which saw a selection of titles from across both Xbox and Xbox 360 being made available on Xbox One systems.
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