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Ghost of Tsushima PC release coming 16 May

Rejoice!

Ghost of Tsushima PC release has been scheduled for 16 May, Sony has today advised.

The port of Sucker Punch’s original PS4 release will be handled by Nixxes, a Sony studio that’s known for its PC ports.

“The PC version of Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut includes the full game, the Iki Island expansion, and the cooperative online multiplayer Legends mode,” Sony said. “For the past year, the team at Nixxes has been working hard to bring the Sucker Punch in-house engine technology to PC and implement PC features such as unlocked frame rates, a variety of graphics settings and presets, and customizable mouse and keyboard controls.”

The PC release will support 21:9, 32:9, and 48:9 resolutions, also utilising NVIDIA DLSS 3, AMD FSR 3, Intel XeSS upscaling, and NVIDIA DLAA or FSR 3 Native AA.

Back in my original review, I said Ghost of Tsushima had potential, despite some missteps.

“Jin is a weak character and his wishy-washiness makes him hard to identify with or support throughout, but he is well placed to be better developed in a sequel,” I wrote. “The narrative has some predictable moments but overall lets you live a samurai… or samurai-like… fantasy. Ultimately, it’s back to the Assassin’s Creed comparisons we go – like the first AC game, this is a brilliant tech demo that’ll spawn much better releases in the future.”

Ghost of Tsushima is available now on PS4 and PS5, and heads to Windows PC via Steam and the Epic Games Store.


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Steve Wright

Steve's the owner and Editor-in-Chief of Stevivor.com, the country’s leading independent video games outlet. Steve arrived in Australia back in 2001 on what was meant to be a three-month working holiday before deciding to emigrate and, eventually, becoming a citizen.

Stevivor is a combination of ‘Steve’ and ‘Survivor’, which made more sense back in 2001 when Jeff Probst was up in Queensland. The site started as Steve’s travel blog before transitioning over into video games.

Aside from video games, Steve has interests in hockey and Star Trek, playing the former and helping to cover video games about the latter on TrekMovie.com. By day, Steve works as the communications manager of the peak body representing Victorians as they age.