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Super Smash Bros Ultimate Switch It was only a matter of time before Switch’s second-best fighting game took a cue from the numero uno. Yet perhaps profession­al jealousy has got to Sakurai: it’d explain why Min Min is arguably the weakest of the DLC fighters, and nigh-on useless at close quarters. Maybe we just need a bit more practice: her unparallel­ed range gives her a decent distance game, albeit mainly against slower, heavier characters. Either way, she’s far more at home in the Ramen Bowl, to which we soon return.

Bioshock Switch In unfamiliar times, it’s familiarit­y that appeals most. And so, in the midst of a hectic move, we return to Rapture for the umpteenth time. The Switch port doesn’t skimp on visual flair, including the realtime reflection­s that made the PC original look so sumptuous. What it doesn’t feature is gyroscopic aiming – but when you’re playing in the car while hauling furniture across the country, shotgunnin­g precision is hardly achievable anyway.

The Elder Scrolls Online: Greymoor Xbox One We’ve sunk thousands of hours into ESO in the last five years, which equates to a lot of dungeons, dragons and fetch quests for felines – but still we’re not done. While the MMORPG is starting to feel decidedly rough round the edges, the depth of singleplay­er questing keeps us hooked alongside a new Skyrim-set chapter. Another mead, please, barkeep: we intend to quaff ‘til we see dragons flying backwards.

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