We've had a few analogies now but I'll throw in just one more. It's unusually slapdash, even by eccentric Sony standards. Some pointed to the slightly excessive number of asterisks in that initial reveal of the launch lineup - I think we got up to four, as though Sony was following up game names with a random f-bomb - and after launch it's now a little clearer why that is.
#Batman arkham city poster portable#
That list, also, is missing the entirety of Sony's handheld catalogue - nothing from PSP or Vita, aside from Echocrome (also on PS3 cloud streaming) and Super Stardust Portable - which is a tragedy.ĭuplicates in the list are fairly regular, thanks to Sony's weird way of labelling PS5 and PS4 versions of the same thing.
The search function is separate from the catalogue list pages (there is a separate list of games tucked away in a separate part of the menus) and there's no way to just view all the games from all collections in one big list - several are missing, only showing up when you start to filter by genre. Presumably that's because Sony's counting the old games recently made available again as "newer", but it's not too helpful. The UI is a bit all over the place: if you sort a list by "newest first" you'll get 1999's Ape Escape first, ahead of 2011's Batman: Arkham City, say, that's about halfway down the list. A lot of the Classics - 350-odd of the 400-odd apparently - are PS3 games you can only play via cloud streaming, which is not always ideal, and also quite strange when you normally associate cloud-streamed games with the bleeding edge. Not satisfied? How about a range of floating, disconnected sequels like, um, Epic Mickey 2, Greg Hastings Paintball 2, Samurai Warriors 4, Ninja Gaiden 3, and several but definitely not all of the Dynasty Warriors games. Again: some gems! Jumping Flash! Ape Escape! Hotline Miami! But also a bafflingly vast array of licensed film tie-ins: Cars Race-o-Rama, Brave: The Video Game, Tron: Evolution, more.
#Batman arkham city poster plus#
That sense of jumble-sale, turn-out-your-pockets, dig out a box from grandad's attic-style curation is only added to by the Classic Catalogue of PS Plus Premium. Or maybe it's like an auction, where there's a really valuable vase coming up but you have to buy the whole drawer of smashed plates and 30-year-old mugs and some creepy little porcelain pig that comes with the lot. It makes the Game Catalogue feel a bit like a bargain bin, where you have to sift through mounds of shovelware to maybe find a gem. It is weird, though, and besides appeasing people like me who just like a bit of chaos to their corporate decision-making, it's not clear how this really benefits anyone. This is, first of all, brilliant, because it's very eccentric Sony to do that, and eccentric Sony is probably Sony at its best. Some classic Star Wars nostalgia, some big blockbusters, some other. Games that, after asking around a bit, I'm not sure anyone here has heard of. There are also hundreds - hundreds - of games that you might categorise under "other". Starting with Extra, there's some good stuff here: acclaimed indies like Soma and Outer Wilds, modern, third-party blockbusters like Assassin's Creed Valhalla and Guardians of the Galaxy, a few legendary first-party ones like Shadow of the Colossus, and those lovely mid-tier, multiplayer or PvE games that are such brilliant fits for subscription services, like Space Hulk: Deathwing and Vermintide 2. You take a look at the very long, very weird list of games you can get with Extra or Premium, and try to pin that lot down. It is probably fair to say that the two catalogues are what will matter most to most people, and it's also probably fair to say these two catalogues are where things stop making quite as much sense. Watch on YouTube Sony introduces the new PS Plus.