It's bordering on visual novel territory-point being, while the graphics are there to add personality to a scene, the animation tends to be pretty simple and simply augment the dialogue. Outside of combat, Persona is a very dialogue heavy game. But even then the VO played just fine without slowdown. I only encountered one scene, with a large number of 3D characters on-screen at once, where the framerate dipped below 30 fps and was noticeably sluggish. Performance wasn't great, but mostly fluctuated between 30 and 40 fps, bouncing as high as 60 fps if there wasn't much going on on-screen. I played a couple hours of Persona 4 on the laptop, running at 1920x1080 and 100% resolution scaling. The integrated HD Graphics 520 weren't exactly powerful in 2015, and are basically decrepit now. Unsurprisingly, the game runs well on both desktops, but it's also playable on my laptop, running nearly five year old hardware. Laptop: i5-6200U, Intel HD Graphics 520, 8GB RAM.I tested Persona 4 Golden on three PCs with a range of hardware: I think even with serviceable mouse/keyboard controls, the game will still be most comfortably played with a controller. Q and E pan the camera, which works okay. Unfortunately it doesn't let you use the mouse to control the camera in-game (though you can click to recenter the camera behind you). Unlike some other PC ports of older console games, Persona 4 supports the mouse in menus, so it feels like a proper PC game, though with a bit of residual weirdness. It would be nice to see an in-game limiter with options like 30, 60, 144, etc., but still, it's wonderful to see a Japanese PC port of a decade-old game with an unlocked framerate. But that's because it's seemingly unlocked (a bit more detail on this in the performance section below). No fancy options here, and at first I was worried not to see framerate listed at all.
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