![]() ![]() ![]() The WipEout Omega Collection is bursting at the seams with content. The ability to toggle between three difficulty levels helps somewhat, but even the Novice setting is tasking at higher levels. While things start out fairly easy, once you unlock Rapier-class ships, things quickly become dauntingly challenging. The game’s notorious difficulty curve is still well-represented in these games, as well. The development trio of Sony XDev, Clever Beans, and EPOS Game Studios saw to it that the controls you’re used to have been transferred over, while also allowing for mapping if you decide you’d rather try something else out. Rest assured, WipEout’s signature tight controls are here in full force. It’s a hard-hitting soundtrack that is electronica heavy, and while music is a highly subjective art form, in this humble reviewer’s opinion, any video game that includes The Prodigy as an audio track is a winner. The soundtracks are not limited to each game, either, so you can expect to hear music from 2048 in HD and/or Fury, and vice versa. What good is a WipEout game without a thumping soundtrack? 28 audio tracks are available at launch with this collection, ostensibly drawing from all three featured games. Double the eye-melting goodness if you also have a High Dynamic Range (HDR) set, because colors will pop so hard you’ll swear the game’s running in glasses-free 3D. An intense mix of high-contrast environments and futuristic visual effects will melt your eyeballs if you’ve got your PlayStation 4 hooked up to a 4K, Ultra High Definition (UHD) television. First and foremost, this is the best-looking WipEout game ever released. ![]()
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