
We strongly recommend you stop using this browser until this problem is corrected. The latest version of the Opera browser sends multiple invalid requests to our servers for every page you visit.The most common causes of this issue are: While you wait, you can read both our Journey review and The Unfinished Swan review from their days on PlayStation 3, and watch the trailer for the Journey re-release embedded above.Your IP address has been temporarily blocked due to a large number of HTTP requests. So it looks like we may have to be patient. He also had no comment on when we could expect Journey and The Unfinished Swan to drop on PlayStation 4, refusing even to confirm that they would launch sometime in 2014. The Sony representative demoing the games had no comment on possible Vita ports. One of those leaks, derived from the Korean Games Rating Board, indicated that The Unfinished Swan would also come to Vita.

Both titles were announced only for PS4, but both games’ existence on PS4 leaked a week or two ago. Then, there’s the matter of these games one day appearing on PlayStation Vita. And some people might want to do just that, as porting studios Tricky Pixels (Journey) and Armature (Swan) seem to be doing a nice job keeping the respective visions of Thatgamecompany and Giant Sparrow completely consistent. People new to the experiences can purchase them outright, and will thereafter own both the PS3 and PS4 iterations for the price of one. That’s right: if you purchased them on Sony’s last-gen hardware, they’ll be yours free of charge on PS4. “That’s why it’s good news that both games will be free on PlayStation 4 if you already own them on PlayStation 3. Swan is much more of a “game” than Journey it’s easier to access, understand, and play, and its mechanics – ever-changing and oh-so-clever – practically beg you to see it more than once through. The Unfinished Swan, on the other hand, is as quirky as ever, and movement feels nice on PS4’s DualShock 4. The game resonated with me so much that I’m afraid seeing it all again would ruin that experience. I’m not so sure I actually want to play it again on PS4, but that’s because I promised myself I’d only play it once through on PS3. Journey truly is an incredible, emotional game, and it seems that it’s set to remain so on next-gen hardware. The lighting effects, the sand, and the way your character’s robes move and sway make for an aesthetically impressive experience. Journey was a looker on PS3 it’s somehow even more beautiful on PlayStation 4.
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Play Graphically, the new treatment is most impressive with Journey, but maybe that’s because I only played through a brief portion of Swan’s black-and-white intro sequence.
