![]() The non-graphical options are nothing special, either, but hardly offensive. If you’re looking to carefully tweak everything to your exact liking, this is not the game for you. The remaining options are pretty sparse, generally only allowing you to swap between Low/Medium/High, or On/Off. The in-game options let you adjust brightness and turn off depth of field, as well as futz with the field of view – always a welcome option, although I actually didn’t set it much higher than the default. I’ve been fairly happy with it around 75, myself.Īrguably, there isn’t a huge difference between the two. I will note that the resolution goes past 1920×1080, but I haven’t tried that out because I don’t have a monitor that supports it.ĩ0 is as high as the FOV will go, though it defaults to 65. I suppose it might be worthwhile if you set it to some sort of impossible resolution and need to change things because it just won’t load anymore, mind you. The launcher is actually fairly inconsequential, if only because Mafia 3 does in fact contain full in-game settings, which are rather more detailed than this. Me? I’m just dabbling, for now.įirst things first, there is a launcher, and it has options: I bought into the Mafia 3 life with Actual Money (not acquired through racketeering), what with the UK release being slightly earlier than the US, but PC Invasion caporegime Peter’s the one who’s opted into a life of crime with a full review when/if code actually comes in. ![]() I should note that, as with everyone else, we’ve yet to receive review code. I mostly hadn’t: I’d at least partly kept myself in the dark because I knew I’d be writing this and wanted to experience things for myself, but I’m afraid the outlook is a bit bleak. By now you’ve probably heard all about Mafia 3‘s issues on the PC. ![]()
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