

The Switch ports are scaled-down versions of the recent PS4 and Xbox One remasters of the BioShock Collection, which have been tidied up to run on Switch. So given that these are significant titles, are they worth your while on the Switch? As I’ll come to argue in a later thinkpiece, all roads lead to BioShock. The series as a whole (or at least more accurately 1 and 3) have laid so much groundwork for the way we conceive games. We’ve never quite stopped talking about it – not as players, not as critics, not as developers.

And maybe that’s more a statement about how quickly time has passed rather than how robust the ideas within these three games are, but revisiting BioShock feels almost quaint. BioShock, BioShock 2 and BioShock Infinite are, amazingly, retro games now. I love how far the gaming medium has come in such a short amount of time.
