Review cover South Park: The Fractured But Whole (Nintendo Switch)
Official GBAtemp Review

Product Information:

  • Release Date (NA): April 24, 2018
  • Release Date (EU): April 24, 2018
  • Publisher: Ubisoft
  • Developer: Ubisoft Studio SF
  • Genres: Role-Playing
  • Also For: Computer, PlayStation 4, Xbox One

Game Features:

Single player
Local Multiplayer
Online Multiplayer
Co-operative
Let's play superheroes in the Switch's most offensive game yet. Come on down to South Park, and meet some friends of mine.

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Just over six months after its original release, South Park: The Fractured But Whole makes a surprise release on Nintendo's latest system in a turn of events far beyond my own expectations. Oddly without its predecessor, it stands as one of few mature games for the system, but should you be forking out for the portable park?

First Impressions

After getting past the splash screens and general accreditations, you are greeted to a snowy scene of South Park in darkness. With the text "Press A to Start" flashing in the centre of the screen and a score befitting an epic tale such as Skyrim, I found myself eager to start, and a little conflicted on the tone of the game. This intensified as I continued to the main menu. A logo reminiscent of Back to the Future smashed into the top-left of the screen, and a fairly clean and simplistic menu occupying the right, the game feels modern. It feels calculated, and scientific; it doesn't match the soundtrack. This contrast stuck with me as I started the game, and I soon began to piece together its intent.

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Entering into a new game sees you join the fray in an epic battle of kings and wizards, the setting of the previous game Stick of Truth. After a few tense battles as you approach the enemy's castle, the whole thing is called off to play superheroes instead. It was here I started to give the game its due credit. The epic RPG themes of the title's soundtrack bled into this opening section perfectly, before soon getting swept aside just as it did moving to the sleek and stylised main menu. These small attentions to detail demonstrated a level of polish and forward thinking I had honestly not expected from what I know to be a crude and straightforward brand.

Character Creation

Before starting the game, you must first create an avatar to use throughout your time in South Park. With a plethora of options and colours to choose from, you should have no issues finding a unique look to play the game with. There are two particularly interesting options here, both rather reflective of South Park in general; these being your character's skin colour and gender. Making waves when it originally launched last year, difficulty in the game is controlled by skin tone—the darker your skin, the more difficult the game becomes. What elevates this from a normal difficulty slider is Cartman's narration as you are deciding: "Don't worry, this doesn't affect combat. Just every other aspect of your whole life." This difficulty comes in the form of altered dialogue and interactions with other characters, as well as the amount of money received throughout the game. It shines a harsh light on inequality in a way that may seem out of place in any game other than this.

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The character's gender is notable for the lack of option when first creating your character. While the avatar is fairly generic in nature, I found myself seeing then as a male character, and as it were, so does much of the world once you begin the game. Only a few hours in does it actually ask you how you identify after you approach the school councillor. Should you tell him you're female, he expresses disbelief, calling your parents to ask about your response. This really stuck with me when realistically it was a minor plot point in filling out details about your character. Its handling of these themes and social ideas were sensitive and critical within the bounds of familiar South Park mockery and humour, allowing for it to feel perfectly in line with the rest of the world.

It's South Park

What I found most engaging when it came to this game was its parity with the series as a whole. It feels less like a game than it does a long, interactive episode of the show. This is enforced throughout the experience through various means. The most obvious of these is the cutscenes woven throughout the game; they are South Park at its purest, something you look forward to watching as a short break from gameplay. What I perhaps find more striking are the smaller tweaks to make any fan feel at home. From the graphical style as a complete look and feel, to the low-budget and familiarly lazy-looking style of movement; they put forward the essence of the show in a way that almost feels like a natural evolution. Put this with the game's crude and uncensored line of humour and you have a complete South Park package.

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I felt comfortable in the world as I explored, able to pick out landmarks and features from the show. Everything felt crafted in such a way as to spark a brilliant nostalgia whilst pulling it out of my memory and breathing into it new life. While navigating it can at first feel cumbersome, it allows you time to learn the layout before giving you the power of fast travel. Progression through the world and games' systems flow similarly well, pacing itself in a way to allow understanding and appreciation of each aspect without actively holding your hand nor dragging out the experience.

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Strategic Strategy

From everything I played, I found greatest appreciation in the combat system. It features a grid of varying sizes for each battle, where each character uses skills unique to their class to inflict damage over set areas. The system in itself actually feels quite standard, with no particular feature standing out as revolutionary. It put across a fine example of a refined combat system, but this in itself is not where it shines. It's in the characters where this combat system proves itself unique. In presenting a standard system, the developers were given the freedom to toy with your understanding of it and bend it to suit their needs.

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A memorable instance of this was against the Alternate Human Kite, an early boss fight. As he is getting beaten, he decides the fight is unfair, and chooses instead to add rules of his own to cheat. It's childish, with your ally Human Kite criticising him in the background for this. Through this cheating, he creates new skills, and goes as far as stealing your turn by saying you attacked him while he was taking a break. It's stupid, and fourth wall-breaking, but brilliant in that is stays within the bounds of the game while doing this. This fourth wall-breaking also occurs randomly in fights happening on roads, the characters occasionally noticing an oncoming car. Seeing this, they react by pausing the fight, moving out of the road, and getting shouted at by the driver. These details stuck with me. They reminded me through the charade of the gameplay, that it is a group of children having fun. It's a purity I hadn't expected to see in a South Park game I couldn't help but appreciate.

Closing Thoughts

A criticism of the game I held throughout playing was the feel of Ubisoft throughout. This feeling is particularly difficult to quantify, but showed itself in small areas. Things like costumes being in my inventory I couldn't access without being a Ubisoft Club member, or having South Park adverts visible on the main menu. They don't go far in taking away from the stellar gameplay experience, but they become noticeable. They put a slightly generic spin on the game that could have been mocked by the characters, that could have been woven into the gameplay, but simply weren't. South Park: The Fractured But Whole remains a game I would wholeheartedly recommend to any lover of the series, or anybody looking for a good laugh, but I can't help but be a little sad the developers couldn't toy with their reputation a little more. While I can't say how it compares to the other versions of the game, the Switch provides a perfect vessel to play without any real drawback; the portable experience was one worth waiting for.

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Verdict

What We Liked ...
  • Fantastic writing indistinguishable from standard South Park
  • All the vulgar humour you would expect
  • Impressive attention to smaller details
  • Constant fourth wall breaking seamlessly woven throughout
What We Didn't Like ...
  • A few aspects can feel repetitive early on
  • Minor annoyances with Ubisoft advertising
8
Gameplay
The combat relies on your knowledge of it and twists it against you in ways only the fourth graders of South Park would know how. It is standard, but brilliantly so; polished to a degree of excellence.
8
Presentation
This game looks and feels like it should. It is South Park in its purest form, ready for any Switch owner to digest at their will. While nothing goes far in standing out, each element comes together well to form a brilliant overall look and feel.
9
Lasting Appeal
A fantastic Switch game that deserves to stay in memory. Its humour, antics, and narrative all drive home a childlike charm, with all the vulgarity that comes with the series name.
8.6
out of 10

Overall

This is a must-have for fans of the series, fans of fourth wall-breaking, vulgarity, and humour. South Park: The Fractured But Whole offers the complete South Park experience wherever you are, at the cost of no cut content, and no lacking performance. It inspires hope for more mature games on the system, and once again shows just what it is capable of.
I would like to add a CON. The callgirl sidequest is broken!
Just Googled the quest and... Yeah that does sound pretty bad. Must've skipped over it fortunately. Should be fixed in the next update though, so it's probably not worth adding at this point.
 
Just Googled the quest and... Yeah that does sound pretty bad. Must've skipped over it fortunately. Should be fixed in the next update though, so it's probably not worth adding at this point.
I sure hope so. Was a massive turn off because Callgirl is freaking awesome! Never the less, good review :)
 
  • Like
Reactions: Scarlet
Game is excellent at plot, gameplay and visuals get 8.6. While shitty god of war that sux at all, beside visuals, get 10s.
 
Didn't the Switch port have pretty common bugs that wiped your entire save file, all slots? I remember reading about that.
 
Game is excellent at plot, gameplay and visuals get 8.6. While shitty god of war that sux at all, beside visuals, get 10s.
Eh, I've had people complain at me for giving visual novels a high score. "Why does some wall of text get higher than BotW???" and the like. Truth be told, a numerical comparison of games is flawed for reasons beyond my ability to list them. A 10 for a visual novel would be a different criteria to a 10 for an RPG, and even the criteria for a 10 in a single genre varies from person to person. It's easier to view the score as a supplement to the review itself. It often acknowledges the listed flaws and limitations, but you can never get a complete image from it.

But that's just my view on scores, I can certainly appreciate differing opinions.
Didn't the Switch port have pretty common bugs that wiped your entire save file, all slots? I remember reading about that.
It seems to be tied to a specific side quest I didn't do, so I luckily avoided it. Should be fixed soon though, so it's not worth adjusting the review for.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Chizko
8.6 for this dumpster fire of a game? ....please. Quests are broken, save files delete themselves, turns randomly get skipped for no reason, framerate drops are CONSTANT, infinite loading screens, randomly missing audio (anything from music, to voices, to sound effects).... PLEASE do not get this game on Switch. I did and boy do I regret it. What a crappy, half-assed port. Then again, its Ubisoft. I should have expected as much.
 
Review cover
Product Information:
  • Release Date (NA): April 24, 2018
  • Release Date (EU): April 24, 2018
  • Publisher: Ubisoft
  • Developer: Ubisoft Studio SF
  • Genres: Role-Playing
  • Also For: Computer, PlayStation 4, Xbox One
Game Features:
Single player
Local Multiplayer
Online Multiplayer
Co-operative

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General chit-chat
Help Users
  • TwoSpikedHands @ TwoSpikedHands:
    Do I restart now using what i've learned on the EU version since it's a better overall experience? or do I continue with the US version since that is what ive been using, and if someone decides to play my hack, it would most likely be that version?
  • Sicklyboy @ Sicklyboy:
    @TwoSpikedHands, I'll preface this with the fact that I know nothing about the game, but, I think it depends on what your goals are. Are you trying to make a definitive version of the game? You may want to refocus your efforts on the EU version then. Or, are you trying to make a better US version? In which case, the only way to make a better US version is to keep on plugging away at that one ;)
  • Sicklyboy @ Sicklyboy:
    I'm not familiar with the technicalities of the differences between the two versions, but I'm wondering if at least some of those differences are things that you could port over to the US version in your patch without having to include copyrighted assets from the EU version
  • TwoSpikedHands @ TwoSpikedHands:
    @Sicklyboy I am wanting to fully change the game and bend it to my will lol. I would like to eventually have the ability to add more characters, enemies, even have a completely different story if i wanted. I already have the ability to change the tilemaps in the US version, so I can basically make my own map and warp to it in game - so I'm pretty far into it!
  • TwoSpikedHands @ TwoSpikedHands:
    I really would like to make a hack that I would enjoy playing, and maybe other people would too. swapping to the EU version would also mean my US friends could not legally play it
  • TwoSpikedHands @ TwoSpikedHands:
    I am definitely considering porting over some of the EU features without using the actual ROM itself, tbh that would probably be the best way to go about it... but i'm sad that the voice acting is so.... not good on the US version. May not be a way around that though
  • TwoSpikedHands @ TwoSpikedHands:
    I appreciate the insight!
  • The Real Jdbye @ The Real Jdbye:
    @TwoSpikedHands just switch, all the knowledge you learned still applies and most of the code and assets should be the same anyway
  • The Real Jdbye @ The Real Jdbye:
    and realistically they wouldn't

    be able to play it legally anyway since they need a ROM and they probably don't have the means to dump it themselves
  • The Real Jdbye @ The Real Jdbye:
    why the shit does the shitbox randomly insert newlines in my messages
  • Veho @ Veho:
    It does that when I edit a post.
  • Veho @ Veho:
    It inserts a newline in a random spot.
  • The Real Jdbye @ The Real Jdbye:
    never had that i don't think
  • Karma177 @ Karma177:
    do y'all think having an sd card that has a write speed of 700kb/s is a bad idea?
    trying to restore emunand rn but it's taking ages... (also when I finished the first time hekate decided to delete all my fucking files :wacko:)
  • The Real Jdbye @ The Real Jdbye:
    @Karma177 that sd card is 100% faulty so yes, its a bad idea
  • The Real Jdbye @ The Real Jdbye:
    even the slowest non-sdhc sd cards are a few MB/s
  • Karma177 @ Karma177:
    @The Real Jdbye it hasn't given me any error trying to write things on it so I don't really think it's faulty (pasted 40/50gb+ folders and no write errors)
  • DinohScene @ DinohScene:
    run h2testw on it
    +1
  • DinohScene @ DinohScene:
    when SD cards/microSD write speeds drop below a meg a sec, they're usually on the verge of dying
    +1
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    Samsung SD format can sometimes fix them too
  • Purple_Heart @ Purple_Heart:
    yes looks like an faulty sd
  • Purple_Heart @ Purple_Heart:
    @Psionic Roshambo i may try that with my dead sd cards
    +1
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    It's always worth a shot
  • TwoSpikedHands @ TwoSpikedHands:
    @The Real Jdbye, I considered that, but i'll have to wait until i can get the eu version in the mail lol
    TwoSpikedHands @ TwoSpikedHands: @The Real Jdbye, I considered that, but i'll have to wait until i can get the eu version in the...