For those who have just started their epic journey in Ghost of Tsushima, you may have heard that there is a special Digital Deluxe horse — and to help you choose the best, we’ll go over each of the horses.
Plenty will be diving in for the first time as it has just received a PC release, which is said to run quite well on the Steam Deck too.
Given its gorgeous visuals and stunning design, we’d highly recommend playing it on the Steam Deck OLED to take advantage of the fantastic HDR implementation.
Better yet, you can also play Ghost of Tsushima in co-op, but the situation is a little odd, for sure.
But that is plenty horsing around from us, so saddle up and let us gallop apace and trot on to the rest of the article before this intro bores you and you hoof it out of here.
The Ghost of Tsushima Digital Deluxe horse is a brown horse. That’s it.
Time to go home, folks.
It is a lovely brown horse, though. Perhaps even fitting of the moving My Lovely Horse, the Eurosong Contest Entry for 1996 from Father Ted Crilly and Father Dougal McGuire.
The evocative lyrics certainly haven’t been far from our lips as we have trotted across the landscape of Tsushima.
Unfortunately, you cannot shower your lovely brown horse with sugar lumps, polish their hooves or bring them to the horse dentist, but you can ride them over fences, at least, with their fetlocks blowing in the wind.
To get the Ghost of Tsushima Digital Deluxe horse (who is very lovely), you must either buy the Digital Deluxe or Director's Cut edition of Ghost of Tsushima.
If you have, you can select them after the initial prologue when Yuna takes Jin through the Mongol camp and you end up at the stable.
There, you can select from four (or more in the New Game+ mode) and give them a name: Nobu (Trust), Sora (Sky) or Kage (Shadow), which are all rather lovely names for lovely horses.
In the Japanese localisation of Ghost of Tsushima, your lovely horse is referred to as «horse» or is simply whistled upon, as horses were not
Read more on radiotimes.com