Much like Final Fantasy 7 Remake, the freshly released Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth has its fair share of frankly jarring graphical issues. As noted in our review, the game as a whole can be very pretty — especially when you're looking out across the countryside or watching one of the title's many amazing cutscenes — but dig a little deeper, and it's certainly not what you'd expect from a PS5 exclusive.
Digital Foundry's report on the RPG lays it all out rather well. In terms of art direction and overall visual identity, it's a good looking release — but it's deeply flawed on a technical level. «Unfortunately, there are some areas where Rebirth is just treading water relative to its four-year old predecessor — and quite a few spots where we've actually seen a step back,» the report reads.
It goes on to highlight some notable issues, which include incredibly flat or completely missing lighting techniques, shockingly blurry shadows — something Remake did much better, apparently — and loads of seriously low quality textures. «FF7 Remake had a lot of issues with texturing in its PS4 incarnation, but Intergrade on PS5 mostly solved these issues. For Rebirth though, there's a bizarre mixture of low and high resolution assets,» the analysis continues.
Fortunately, Rebirth runs well — at least in terms of frame rate. It's a near locked 30fps when you're using Graphics mode, and a fairly consistent 60fps in Performance mode. The only downside is that resolution is dynamic regardless of the visual setting you choose. Graphics has dynamic 4K, while Performance is stuck with a muddy dynamic resolution average of 1152p. No wonder it looks so blurry at times.
It's a shame that this sort of stuff couldn't be better optimised — especially since Rebirth doesn't have to worry about running on old PS4 hardware. Again, it really is a game of visual highs and lows on a near constant basis.
Robert's been a dedicated PlayStation fan since the days of Tekken 2, and he still loves a good dust
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