Souls Remastered | Dark

The core gameplay—an interconnected world explored through trial-and-error—remains untouched. What's the difference between the original and remastered?

: The infamous framerate drops in areas like Blighttown have been resolved, providing a "buttery smooth" experience. Dark Souls Remastered

: The game runs at a native 1080p and 60 FPS on base PS4 and Xbox One. Enhanced consoles like the PS4 Pro and Xbox One X output at 1800p (upscaled to 4K), while PC supports native 4K . : The game runs at a native 1080p

, released in 2018, serves as a refined port of FromSoftware’s 2011 dark fantasy masterpiece to modern hardware. While it preserves the original's acclaimed level design and challenging combat, it focuses on technical stability and minor quality-of-life updates rather than a complete visual or mechanical overhaul. Technical Enhancements While it preserves the original's acclaimed level design

: The remaster introduces a new lighting model, improved particle effects (such as for magic and boss dust), and volumetric fog. Some veteran players note that the brighter palette can occasionally diminish the original’s oppressive atmosphere. Gameplay and Quality-of-Life Changes

The primary draw of the remaster is its performance stability, particularly for console players.