By Rob Leane

Published: Thursday, 27 January 2022 at 12:00 am


4.0 out of 5 star rating

In a move that must be timed to coincide with the impending Uncharted movie release date, the developers from Sony’s Naughty Dog studio are releasing remastered versions of their two most recent Uncharted games.

When the Uncharted: Legacy of Thieves Collection lands on PS5 this week (and on PC later this year), players will be able to revisit 2016’s Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End and 2017’s Uncharted: The Lost Legacy with a bevy of visual options that were not available before.

Reviewing a remaster is always something of a tricky proposition, though – are you actually reviewing the games themselves (which already got a round of positive write-ups when they initially launched), or should you focus instead on the upgrades that have been made in the new version and whether they’re worth paying for?

If you’d like some insight in the former camp, well, we’re pleased to report that A Thief’s End and The Lost Legacy are both still really good games, among the most ambitious and re-playable titles in the Uncharted franchise. Between the two games, you’ll see how Nathan Drake’s story concludes and how his legacy lives on afterwards, playing from a number of different perspectives as you do so.

The opening segment of A Thief’s End is particularly worth a look at the moment, with its extended flashback about Nathan’s younger years seeming like the pitch-perfect prototype for Tom Holland‘s role in the upcoming big-screen adaptation. This opening level is both an introduction to Nathan as a character and a tutorial to the franchise’s common gameplay mechanics, making it a perfect place for new or returning fans to jump in.

"Uncharted:
Uncharted: Legacy of Thieves Collection makes two great games look better than before.
Sony/Naughty Dog

If you’re looking for an Uncharted fix to accompany your excitement about the film, this brace of games will do the job nicely – they’ve got great action sequences, twisty narratives and an array of interesting characters to meet and areas to explore.

But what about the second camp? What does this remaster add to those pre-loved games? Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End already boasts a 93 Metacritic score, while The Lost Legacy has a respectable 84 on Metacritic, so why should you pick up this remaster rather than just playing the original games (which you can probably find cheaper than the remaster package)?

Well, the perks of this remaster mostly fall into the visual category, with Sony and Naughty Dog ramping up the options when it comes to graphical fidelity and frames-per-second performance. The games have now been bolstered with no less than three different visual modes.

Your options are Quality mode (which offers frame rates up to 30 fps and a resolution of 3840 x 2160, more commonly known as 4K), Performance mode (up to 60 fps and 2560 x 1440 resolution, better known as QHD) or Performance Plus mode (up to 120 fps and 1080p resolution, which is your standard Full HD). That’s a really nice range of options, but you will need more than just a PS5 to be able to see all the benefits of those choices.

If you’ve got yourself a really nice gaming monitor or one of the best TVs for gaming (like the LG C1, for example), you’ll be able to take your pick from those options. If you’re able to get Performance Plus mode running, you’ll be feeling the game in a smoother way than you ever could’ve done before. Or if you can run Quality mode, the characters and settings in the games will look sharper than before. All of these options are great to have, and they’ll surely go down well when the Legacy of Thieves Collection gets its PC release later down the line. Take a look at Eurogamer’s Digital Foundry side-by-side comparison to see what the differences are: