Switch
Trek to Yomi
(ESRB - Standard, Revision 000)
- Hack and slash/Beat 'em up
- Adventure
- Indie
Publishers:
- Flying Wild Hog
- Devolver Digital
Developers:
- Leonard Menchiari
Offline play
Yes
Download required
No
Tested by Nintendo Revised on Switch OLED
Also tested on:
Version 0.2 on cart.
This game is fully playable from the cartridge. Achieved 100% completion, which includes collecting all artifacts, all skills, all upgrades, all journal entries, and all move-sets.
The game has a similar style to the old Resident Evil games, so there are multiple camera angles, multiple corridors, rooms, etc. in this game. This is important to know so the upcoming information within this test makes more sense.
There were some minor stutters during gameplay, especially when transitioning from one room to another.
During certain camera angles, the game looks great, but in others not so much. The areas that look great are areas where the character is the focal point and the camera is close to the character. Whereas, when the camera expands to an angle where there are a lot of things on screen, the game looks really blurry, and has a jagged look to it. This can sometimes make it difficult to see an enemy coming. We did take a few hits because we didn’t realize there was an enemy approaching. This only happened during the expanded camera scenes.
All the above also applies to cutscenes.
Loading times can be a bit lengthy, yet primarily when initially loading in a new chapter .
There was one minor bug where the character got stuck in the floor. Reloading the last check point fixed it.
Framerate was mostly stable. On a few occasions the framerate did take a minor dip, but the game picked back up rather quickly.
This game does not support capture in any way, neither pictures nor videos, from the cartridge build.
Played in handheld. No DRM.
Accessibility options included: None, but there is an easy mode, normal, and hard mode. After the game is beaten at least once, this unlocks Kensei mode, which is a harder difficulty.
Languages: English, Polish, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, Italian, Russian, Japanese, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, and Korean.
The entire game is voiced in Japanese, with whatever subtitles you chose based on the languages above, but there is also optional English voice acting that can be turned on, which is built onto the cart.
Keep in mind that the English subtitles and the English voice acting sometimes don't match. There may be times where the voice actor says a lot more than what is displayed on the subtitles.