![]() For all technical details on the game, please refer to Digital Foundry's tech review video that is embedded below. Overall, Alan Wake Remastered is still a worthy remake of one of the great games of the Xbox 360 era. Fog, object physics, and dynamic shadows all impressed 11 years ago, and largely still hold up. The game also lacks some modern features like HDR and raytracing support. Looking back, Alan Wake was something of a technical showcase on release, as an Xbox exclusive. It was already known since the official announcement that Alan Wake Remastered would include both DLCs The Writer and The Signal, but the standalone add-on Alan Wake's American Nightmare is unfortunately missing from the remaster. ![]() The PlayStation 5 version of Alan Wake Remastered appears to be dropping a few more frames here and there, but in comparison to the Xbox version there is no screen tearing thanks to activated V-Sync. Alan Wake Remastered PS5 vs Xbox Series XS Frame Rate Comparison. The Jedi Survivor performance varies depending on the console, as described by the official FAQ for the game from Electronic Arts. On PS5 and Xbox Series X, the remaster is rendered at a resolution of 1440p while mostly maintaining 60fps. Alan Wake Remastered features higher resolution textures, improved lighting and shadow effects as well as overhauled character models for which modern shader effects have been utilized. In the aforementioned video, it becomes quite clear that the visual jump from the Xbox 360 original to current next-gen consoles is quite significant. During gameplay, Alan Wake Remastered looks and feels almost exactly like the original. Alan Wake Remastered ( from US$29 on Amazon) launched last week on PC, PS4, PlayStation 5 and Xbox One and Series X/S consoles, and since gamers are mostly spending their hard-earned money for the graphical improvements of such a remaster, Digital Foundry has now put Alan Wake Remastered through its paces and released a tech review video of the new game. The entire image looks much clearer, and performance is locked to 60 fps at up to 4K resolution on the PS5. Posted: 6:00 am Remedy has announced a full remaster of its cult classic Alan Wake, due to arrive this fall on PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X/S, Xbox One, and PC (via Epic.
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