

Looney Tunes charisma is intactĪs I learned in a June interview with Vicarious Visions' producers, this Crash Bandicoot anthology is a tricky one to describe. Developer Vicarious Visions chose authenticity over improvement, and, in the sphere of gaming history and archival, that choice matters. Sane Trilogy a tough game to unequivocally recommend, it also feels like the only way this collection could have come out. It also lands with the same baggage that made Crash such a divisive platformer series in the '90s. Sane Trilogy lands this week with a lot of apparent love and care. No pre-order restrictions no microtransactions not even corner-cutting on the game's production. A few uneven and unoptimized classic-game remasters have been pumped out in recent years, and I'm happy to report that the Crash series' handlers at Activision have not dropped the ball in any Activision-y way, beyond a current lock on PlayStation 4 systems. Sane Trilogy gets about as much right as a game trilogy of this scope possibly could.

Game details Developer: Vicarious VisionsĬrash Bandicoot N.
