In October of 2018 I fell in love with CrossCode, a solo PC action RPG disguised as a retro 2D fantasy MMO. I put it on my top games of 2018 list, where Jason Schreier saw it, played it, and fell in love as well. On Thursday CrossCode finally comes out for consoles. Now everybody can love it. Heck, Iām loving it all over again on the Switch.
CrossCode tells the story of Lea, a blue-haired girl who finds herself trapped inside CrossWorlds, a fictional massively multiplayer online role-playing game. Unlike the other player characters she encounters on her 40-80 hour adventure, Lea is unable to log out from the game, forced to play in order to uncover her lost memories and figure out the mystery behind her trapped state. Sheās joined on her quest by members of the First Scholars, her in-game guild populated by ārealā players. The whole thing is so damn charming.
Back when Jason and I played CrossCode on our computers, developer Radical Fish Games had no plans to release the sprawling epic on consoles, which was odd, as itās perfect console fare. The 2D pixel graphics are endearing but not demanding of hardware. The abilities to save anywhere and teleport to waypoints instantaneously are both very console friendly, especially if the console in question is the partially portable Switch. Fortunately, ports were announced in early January 2019, and after a slight delay theyāre just about here. Not only does CrossCode go live for the PlayStation 4, Switch, and Xbox One on July 9, itās also part of Xbox Game Pass, so subscribers to Microsoftās game service get it for free.
Iām excited. Not just that I get to play the game again with all the tweaks and adjustments Radical Fish Games made to CrossCodeās PC version over the past couple of years. Iām excited that so many others are going to play and enjoy one of my favorite action-RPGs. Iām slightly jealous of the people who get to experience it for the first time.
Iāve been playing CrossCode for Switch on and off for the past week, and itās good stuff. I had a little trouble getting used to aiming Leaās signature battle spheres with the analog stick on my right Joy-Con (itās a twin-stick shooter sort of mechanic), but Iāve adjusted. Itās much easier with the Joy-Cons attached in handheld mode or even better, using a Classic Controller.

Thatās it. Thatās my only complaint. Otherwise itās the same wonderful action RPG I played on the PC. The story is incredibly engaging. The ally characters are charming companions whose commentary about āreal-lifeā matters feel like real MMO player dialogue. The 2D landscape is bustling with virtual players, deepening the massively multiplayer illusion. Deniz Akbulutās incredible soundtrack ties the whole package together. The music sounds like it comes from a Super Nintendo-era classic, which makes CrossCode feel like a sort of retro homecoming rather than something completely new.
CrossCode comes out Thursday for consoles digitally, with limited edition physical versions available for preorder. Man, I canāt wait for everybody to play.