PlayStation 5
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Microsoft made a splash when the company announced it would be taking more of its games to other platforms. That means players will see once-exclusive titles such as "Sea of Thieves" on the PlayStation 5.

One of those titles heading to other systems is "Grounded," Obsidian Entertainment's "Honey I Shrunk the Kids"-inspired survival game. Players take on the role of one of four kids, who end up the size of insects and are trapped in a backyard. They'll have to set up a base and survive in this liliputian wilderness.

On the Xbox Series X, it was a beautiful game showing off the power of the system with gorgeous lighting shining through grass blades and reflections on the water. The PlayStation 5 version shows comparable visuals, but the more impressive version was the one running on the Nintendo Switch.

Despite not being as powerful as the newer consoles, "Grounded" ran well on Nintendo's system. It doesn't have the visual fidelity of Sony or Microsoft's systems, but the game still ran with a smooth frame rate and graphics were still good enough to shine on the 7-year-old console.

Shyla Schofield, seniors communications for Obsidian, credited Double Eleven for working on the port and squeezing all the power from system and optimizing the game for it. What's even more notable is that during the process of optimizing the game for other systems, the developers figured how to improve the "Grounded" performance on PC and Xbox. Schofield said that's something fans noticed, but the developers couldn't comment on the reason behind the improvement until now.

How to play with others

When it comes cross platform play, Nintendo and PlayStation players have native audio communication, but they'll have to sign up for a Microsoft Account. For those who don't want to do that, they can still get around the voice communication barrier through third-party services such as Discord.

The Microsoft Account is required for other "Grounded" features though and that includes Playgrounds, which lets players create their own "Grounded" levels. It's comparable to "Mario Maker," Schofield said. Players will also need an account for cross-save to work. That lets players progress be saved from one console to another.

If players want to enjoy "Grounded" on non-Microsoft platforms, they'll have to buy another copy of the game, but that raises the question: Why would you want do to that? Schofield said having crossplay lets parents play with their children, who may have a Switch. It allows them to be in the same room and coordinate.

Another way a second copy of the could be valuable is that players can work on creations in Playground on the Switch and then copy that level to a PC. Not everyone wants to do level design in front of desk.

"Grounded" is scheduled to go multiplatform April 16, and it will also come with a New Game Plus for fans who want a bigger challenge.

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Citation: How the push to make 'Grounded' a multiplatform game made it better (2024, April 10) retrieved 10 April 2024 from https://techxplore.com/news/2024-04-grounded-multiplatform-game.html

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