Rarely does a game come along that can push the boundaries of our gaming perceptions while still appealing to the facile sensibilities of the masses – and as such this really is one of gaming’s greatest achievements.Īs the PlayStation 2 heads down the ‘ole dusty trail’ into the sunset of our memories, there may be some skeptics, properly basking in the sun of one of those new-fangled systems, who say that the system is outdated, underpowered and incapable of producing a game of next-gen caliber. Workaround: Set GSdx to any of the software modes.The difference between perfection and near perfection in video gaming is a minute margin at best and it’s a testament to the quality of Okami that as I found myself reaching for any significant downfall to point out, I could not find a single one.This is most noticeable with the celestial paintbrush, but other effects such as the combo counter and images in certain cutscenes are also absent. Description: Certain effects are missing.Also known as Ookami (JP, KO), おおかみ (JP). No video or audio glitches, hours of gameplay without any issue. Test configurations on Macintosh: Environmentĭarwin 20.6.0 x86_64 (macOS Big Sur 11.5.2) Settings note: On the same machine, no combination of plugins or settings made the game playable in Windows 7, 8, or 10 without frequent slowdowns, audio studdering, and sacrificing a great deal of visual quality. No slowdown in heavy cut scenes or menus, no corrupt or missing textures. All effects present and rendered beautifully, runs at roughly 125%-450% game speed w ith limiting disabled. PERFORMANCE:same problem as God Hand with ZeroGS Runs slow in some zones and has a lot of lighting problem the specular highlights in combination to the others speedhacks listed above Brings the game up to 60 Stable FPS and fixes lighting bugs but it also disables some effects one of this unfortunately it's the parchment now it just shows a black piece of paper i have found no fix for this ill post the GSdx results later in the "update" Part down below.This game looks better than the PS3 re-release. The game has no graphical or audio glitches. The game runs extremely well at 6x Native resolution. In NTSC mode (60Hz) the game runs perfect. If you start the game in PAL mode (50Hz), the game h ave big "optical" problems, like you haven't (or have) glass on your eyes. Minor bugs encountered, but none too severe.Įverything works fine with Anisotropic Filtering at 4x and MSAA 4x. Very minor slowdown in large maps (Shinshu Field/Taka Pass) and cutscenes. Managed to get full speed with GSdx Hardware settings, custom resolution 800x800 (still full speed but with major slowdo wn in certain areas with 2x Native settings). Ran full speed with very little slowdown at "2x Native" Internal Resolution, Texture Filtering and all available Speedhacks on. I managed to get full speed from an i5 mobile CPU and ATI 5650m mobility GPU. Change to EE=2 and VU=1 giv ing normal speeds. Running the game with EE Cyclerate and VU Cycle Stealing both at 3 will give major slowdown. If you can't run the game in full speed, try turning on speed hacks, but it may break the game. Ōkami was one of the last PlayStation 2 games selected for release prior to the release of the PlayStation 3. It features a distinct sumi-e-inspired cel-shaded visual style and the Celestial Brush, a gesture-system to perform miracles. Set sometime in classical Japanese history, the game combines several Japanese myths, legends and folklore to tell the story of how the land was saved from darkness by the Shinto sun goddess, named Amaterasu, who took the form of a white wolf. The more people who worship her (as a result of her restoring color and doing other good deeds for them), the more powerful she becomes. Since Amaterasu is a diety, there are naturally people who worship her and people who don't. Her task is to restore color (or 'life') to the world by destroying the monsters who have stolen it. Game description: In Okami, the player takes the role of the mythical sun goddess Amaterasu, in the form of a wolf. NTSC-U cover Game general and emulation properties:
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