A little less than ten years ago, a port of Borderlands 2 famously launched for Sony’s ailing PS Vita to middling reception. The fact that a then-current game could run at all on a portable was remarkable, but the flat visuals, crashing, and consistently sub 30 FPS performance relegated it to more of a novelty than a version that people would be comfortable playing for hours on end. When Borderlands 3 Ultimate Edition was announced for the Switch, there was a lot of discourse that history would be repeating itself here, and this wasn’t helped by the general lack of footage leading up to release. Fortunately, any such fears can now be put to rest. Borderlands 3 runs shockingly well on the Switch, bringing over the full, crazy experience in all its glory for portable play.
Borderlands 3 picks up about seven years after the events of Borderlands 2 and follows the interstellar adventures of familiar Crimson Raiders like Lilith, Claptrap, and Ellie alongside newcomers like Ava and Lorelei. The gang this time around faces off against the Calypso Twins, a godlike sibling duo who have united the bandit clans of Pandora under a cult called the Children of the Vault. Notably, Tyreen Calypso has the ability to leech power from other creatures, and if she’s allowed to absorb the powers of the ancient beasts residing in the Vaults hidden across each planet, she’ll become virtually unstoppable.
It's a fine enough story, and much like the previous entries, Borderlands 3 is hardly the kind of game that takes itself too seriously. Virtually every minute of the adventure is packed with juvenile humor and larger-than-life characters that help to keep everything feeling lighthearted, though this can occasionally be grating. Even if not all the jokes land for you, there are enough here that it’s all but guaranteed that some will—it’s hard not to be drawn in by the sheer childish charm of the Borderlands universe.
Gameplay in Borderlands 3 has been described as ‘Diablo with guns’, which feels apt given its potent blend of RPG elements and first-person shooting mechanics. You begin by picking a character from one of four different classes, each of which has three different skill trees that then build that character up in divergent ways. We went with Moze on our playthrough, whose main gimmick is that she can periodically summon a heavy armored mech like D.Va from Overwatch. How you choose to build your character is up to you, though you’ll never get enough skill points to max out every skill tree, so you do need to think about how your picks synergize with each other. Luckily, if you get a few hours in and realize that you’re build isn’t working out, or you just decide that you want to try something different, you can always reset your skills at a cost of 10% of your cash on hand.
As you explore the expansive locales of each planet, you’ll constantly be inundated with mountains of randomly generated, color coded loot. Every gun comes with unique stat modifiers, elemental effects, and abilities, and there are all the expected staples featured here such as shotguns, rifles, and SMGs. To add even more variety, guns also come from a variety of different manufacturers, which each have their own intricacies to navigate. Reloading a Tediore gun, for example, results in your character throwing the spent gun like a grenade and pulling out a new one, while the blast radius and damage will be bigger if there were more bullets left in the clip.
The best part about this loot system is that it feels incredibly deep without being unnecessarily overwhelming or complicated. There are lots of factors to consider when working on a build, but this isn’t necessarily the kind of thing where it feels like you’re laboriously poring over spreadsheets and spending more time crunching numbers than you are shooting raiders in the face. And though everyone will naturally gravitate towards weapons and builds that suit their playstyle, the loot system here feels like it often prompts you to experiment and rethink your build. For example, a really juicy legendary shotgun could drop, and even if it doesn’t work that well with your build, it’s easy enough to respec and try it out to see how it can improve your overall performance.
When you’re not busy messing with your loadout, gunplay feels swift and snappy when you find yourself dragged into the thick of battle. Every character can vault over low obstacles and dash into a long slide, which goes a long way towards making fights feel less stiff than they did in previous entries while the aiming itself is aided in no small part by helpful motion controls that make it much easier to snap to targets. This is the best that the shooting has ever felt in a Borderlands game, and it never gets old whether you’re playing your fifth or fiftieth hour.
Though Borderlands 3 is an open-world game, it doesn’t feature one continuous environment to explore. Instead, you have a central hub in your Sanctuary mothership, which you use to travel to various planets that each feature their own massive, interconnected maps. On each of these, you can scoop up sidequests, go on monster hunts, raid strongholds, and ferret out hidden chests in what feels like an almost never-ending deluge of things to do. And while plenty of the side content here can feel a little ‘fetch quest-y’, some of the side plots meaningfully expand the lore of the characters or environment, and there’s something delightfully relaxing about turning off your brain and spending a few hours knocking out quests while listening to a podcast. All along the way, you’ll be constantly rewarded with new loot drops, and the rewards for completing quests are usually well worth the effort.
Those of you who are easily wooed by content-rich and densely packed open-world games will be pleased to know, too, that this Switch version offers an awful lot of bang for your buck. Alongside the complete base campaign, you get all the DLC that came out in the years since the initial launch, which adds up to well over a hundred hours of content. Content for each DLC is mostly siloed in their own play areas, but whether you’re exploring an enormous space casino or participating in a cheesy Western (complete with a gritty narrator voiceover), these separate campaigns all bring something new or interesting to the table and feel like they meaningfully add to the overall experience. Make no mistake, if Borderlands 3 gets its hooks in you, it’ll be a long time before you finally reach the bottom of all that it has to offer.
Regarding its performance on Switch, Borderlands 3 isn’t far off another ‘miracle port’. Gearbox somehow managed to squeeze 100+ GB of content down to just 23.5 GB with minimal cuts to the visual experience. Sure, textures are lower quality and there’s a little less detail in environments compared to the versions on other platforms, but it looks especially great on the Switch’s screen and these minor tradeoffs are well worth the ability to play on the go. Best of all, the uncapped frame rate is remarkably smooth, even in more intense battles. The lowest it seemed to dip was about 30 FPS in the heaviest sequences, but the vast majority of the time, things are sticking to about 40-50 FPS.
However, there have been some other sacrifices. If you want to play with friends, split-screen co-op isn’t featured here, meaning they’ll need their own Switch and their own copy so they can play with you over either local or online wireless. Also, you can’t have four-player squads here — only two players at once can be in the same world. This lessened multiplayer suite is certainly disappointing, but understandable considering the humble hardware this is being run on. All the same, those of you who play Borderlands mostly with friends may want to keep this in mind before taking the plunge.
Conclusion
Though many doubted how well Borderlands 3 would work on the Switch, we’re pleased to report that this is a well-built port that effectively squeezes down almost the entirety of Borderlands 3 onto Nintendo’s handheld. The deep loot system, stable performance, goofy tone, snappy gunplay, and enormous amount of content all come together to make this one an easy recommendation, though those who prefer multiplayer may be disappointed at the diminished options here. Gearbox rightly deserves praise for the work the team put in here to make this happen; Borderlands 3 on the Switch is well worth your time.
Comments 74
“NOTHING IS MORE BADASS THAN TREATING A WOMAN WITH RESPECT!” - mr Torque, Borderlands 2
How is "stable performance" listed as a positive here if the review literally mentions the game dropping close to half the frames during hectic moments?
Oh look a ps4 game running really well on switch, oh wow
Hey konami, this a ps4 game. We see you with your ps1 ***** next week, we see you
Yeah, this is making me sort of regret buying it on Xbox but I guess the consolation is it looks prettier there. Lol
What about the ai? I heard is dumb with a lot of frozen enemy npc doing nothing even if you stand in front of them is this true?
Download required.
0/10
A framerate mostly wavering between 30 and 60fps is really distracting to me, I'd rather a locked and evenly paced 30fps.
Pro tip: before playing, jump into the audio settings and find the dialogue volume slider. Go ahead and drop that thing to 0. Put on a podcast and just run around shooting and ignoring the characters. You’ll have a good time.
Removed - trolling; user is banned
@Dom_31 Borderlands 2 uses unreal engine 3 and Borderlands 3 uses unreal engine 4 which is a huge leap in tech. Secondly, you can't take a game that is 135GB (PC) and tweak it down to 19GB (Switch) and not expect huge degradation. Borderlands 2 was 22GB total on PC! So it's amazing they got this game working at all. Have you watched the comparison video to the PS5 version? It still looks great considers running on a phone chipset from almost a decade ago!
@5th313ment so treating women with respect, paying taxes and getting married is woke propaganda?
I mean there could be a quest with making taxes, at least it will have more positive example thab Yoshi, the famous tax evader.
@5th313ment you look like a jugallo.
@5th313ment yeah, I'm just gonna put your nonsense on the ignore list, buddy.
And that's ignoring your insanely dumb take about the performance.
I want it for the miracle port job. I love that. Someone here actually got me to retry Borderlands, cause I used to despise it. I really like what I am playing of the Presequel. Jumping around and ground pounding is a blast.
@Frogspree haha you better get used to it. This is where the industry is going from now on.
At least memory cards are getting more and more affordable as time goes on.
From what I saw the performance wasn't especially stable. It isn't capped, so it ranges between 30 and 40 fps much of the time, dropping below 30 during shootouts. It's not the worst by any means, but a 30fps cap option have been a good idea. If Switch 2 features enhanced backwards compatibility - which I really hope it does - it could hit 60fps.
So glad that the whole Borderlands franchise that I care about is now on Switch. And all I need to play the series on the console is an SD card just for it.
Glad to see the game has a good port. I will wait on a sale because FPS games aren’t my thing but will get eventually.
Looks superb. Borderlands 3 is amazing - don’t think the multiplayer limitations are that major - not great but can still play 2 player co-op.
Gobsmacked at this tbh - very impressive.
@Pupuplatter PS1 BS? There's valid reasons to be unhappy about MGS2 and 3 being 30fps, but 1 cannot run above 30 regardless of hardware. There's no emulation patch, no mod for the PC version.
It also runs completely fine at it's intended framerate.
The choice to rock an uncapped frame rate is interesting. 40-50 fps is still jittery and distracting due to not syncing with TV refresh rates. Can't help but think that capping at 30 and using that extra bandwidth to bump the resolution in certain areas may have been a better move.
This is great to see another amazing modern port like this. I haven't played any of the games yet but I've always wanted to so I might pick this up later on sale
@5th313ment You make it sound like giving people basic human rights and respect is a bad thing
The story and humor sucks compared to previous games. As others here (and way more outside NL) mentioned it goes very heavy handed into unnecessary politics unlike the other two games and tries to make them into punchlines that falls flat most of the time. Has nothing to do with the “Ree respect is bad?!” I see here. There is a thing called nuance that BL3 could have learned well here.
The actual gameplay is great though and the port is well done.
@turntSNACO That's pretty much what my brother and I did when we played it on the PS4. He'd watch anime and I would watch DDLC and Dan's descent into madness.
@5th313ment
Only bell ends use woke as a pejorative.
On another note I really like the idea of the looter shooter and I thought the first game was ok. But the weapons in the second game put me off. Instead of being interesting in different ways they were all a bit crap in one way. I really like the look of the bandit guns because they remind me of Geoff Darrow's artwork but in practice they're useless which makes me question why they'd include them.
@Dom_31 doesn't happen that often, hence "stable performance".
Will get this down the line. One of my friends at work loves this game, and only has positive things to say about it. This review makes me want it even more!
@turntSNACO
this is my MO generally for games with voices. 👍 sometimes i even turn the music off, i feel more immersed that way.
this series isn't for me but i was still curious to read this review. thanks!
The review was exactly what I was hoping for… a solid port for a portable experience. I rarely play online multiplayer, so the loss of that functionality isn’t a deal breaker for me personally. To the wishlist it goes!
So their line reporting this is false?
Regarding its performance on Switch, Borderlands 3 isn’t far off another ‘miracle port’. Gearbox somehow managed to squeeze 100+ GB of content down to just 23.5 GB with minimal cuts to the visual experience
I just read someone posting it requires 64gb download? Has anyone see this? So was that extra gb to compensate up to 100gb+ original game size then?
“ with minimal cuts to the visual experience”
Minimal? I played the PS4 version and the visual difference is pretty huge. Still impressive on Switch though, but not minimal.
The sacrifice of Photo Mode was kind of a bummer to me, though (not sure why it’s not mentioned, either).
Just letting everyone know Super Mario wonder is already out on youtube the street date got broken
@JeongersGaming I think they're upset that the games are (iirc) getting an actual enhanced remake for newer consoles, but switch is stuck with the older release.
@Peirceroyal then report it.
@Princess_Lilly in my video games it is. But imagine a Nintendo game where Yoshi is a mobster and he's running in a 2d side scroller not to save the princess or help mario but to hide the evidence from the IRS! Lol
@SwitchForce no, it's no where near 64GB. They've had two large updates since the OG version. I'm curious what they have changed? Borderlands 3 on switch started with v1.0.0 then v1.0.1 and we're now on 1.0.2 and my filesize is still showing 18.9GB without the huge language audio pack.
@5th313ment well then, I have to kindly bid you farewell.
@Dom_31 what was wrong with the way I summed up the performance?
And who said anything about respect and human rights in a video game? What are you all smoking? I want to play a game and enjoy my time with it. I don't want to come out at the other end wearing flag pins and being a feminist. Just tell a good story, but they can't do that without inserting politics.
@RiasGremory I believe I did on the contact thingy don't usually comment on here just usually read the articles and comments but watched a video on YouTube that contains things that as they say spoilers.
I am absolutely loving this on my Switch. It plays great. I personally don't mind the story so much, its just kind of meh compared to the other two. The real draw is how good it looks on Switch and the actual gunplay. The moment to moment gameplay is just outstanding. My biggest gripe with the game though...and the one thing I have to take a stand against in the review...is the performance on Switch. The game has a ton...TON...of random shutdowns. If you leave it in standby too long, and go back into it...it shuts down. You start a cutscene and watch a bit...it shuts down. You are running down a jungle path, chasing a bunch of enemies around...it shuts down. This wouldn't be such an issue, except the initial load time into the game takes quite a bit. In game load times aren't so bad, but that initial load up...oof. I can play all day long, and the game will shut down...guarantied...a handful of times at least. I don't exactly call that "stable".
Good stuff, definitely picking this up on Switch. Great job from the port studio here. This once again proves that the Switch is a lot more capable than folks give it credit for.
@SwitchForce BL3 let's you choose what content you want installed at any given time. The base game plus updates is the approx 24 gigs then any DLC or Language Packs you can download extra then delete when you're done.
@Peirceroyal thats good but anyone that breaks the street date should be banned or should have their system bricked.
@Highlar I reported this and a few other bugs to 2k/gearbox. But please also contact them. Mune forces close like85% of the tune I leave it in standby for more than an hour. Once I start it back up again, bam it shuts down.
@RiasGremory yeah but they aren't breaking the street date, the stores are. Most people aren't like us and know when a game is released to the exact day. They go into a store, see the game and buy it. So why should they be punished?
@Guitario If memory is getting cheaper, they should be able to get a bigger cart. They're the ones missing out anyway, since they are losing sales, so they'd better get used to that. Maybe I'm underestimating the number of muppets lining up to pay more for less.
the fact that there are points where a switch port can run better than the ps4 version even if just barely is super cool despite the huge cut to the graphics
@5th313ment they shouldnt be uploading the videos of gameplay of it on youtube wen officially it hasnt been released yet.
Good to hear that the port is decent. I'll probably play my PC version some before I make any decision to buy it on Switch, because I hear the humor and dialogue in this is dreadful.
@Frogspree when I buy my games if there is a physical without any downloading required then I buy physical. But for games that put a tiny portion on the cart and the rest is a download I do eshop. But most games today at the latter. EA FC24, borderlands 3 are both two games that recently came out where the physical was a waste. These companies don't care as they are trying to kill physical at all costs.
@RiasGremory I understand your point but these people paid for the game and are free to do what they wish with it. That's why this street date issue needs to be handled at a vendor level. Since once the game is purchased it belongs to the customer.
@turntSNACO seriously I tried playing the pre-sequel for the first time ever and from the moment you start the game no one will SHUT UP. Between your radio constantly going off and enemies and bosses chattering non-stop I just shut it off and haven’t gone back since. Might have to try your recommendation.
@5th313ment Most games are still all on the cart, thankfully. I mean jesus, when even rockstar put all of RDR on the cart, you know you are a scumbag company when you cheap out
@betterthanvegas You're talking about Dan Salvato's playthrough of DDLC or just the tone the game starts taking halfway? 😆
I'm glad it turned out well! We've now got the whole series here, that's awesome.
@JustMonika Their name is turntSNACO which is a reference to the Game Grumps, which is who I was watching play it. Dan, one of the Grumps, genuinely did not see the twist coming and lost their mind when it happened.
@5th313ment "I don't want to come out at the other end wearing flag pins and being a feminist." Your profile literally has the American flag as the background. And if your foundations of your beliefs can be rattled so harshly by B3, maybe they are a little silly in the first place?
@5th313ment @Highlar Thanks for the heads up. I use standby/sleep mode a lot so this is very important to me. Sounds like its a great port though and I'll definitely get this sometime in the future. Really glad I skipped on the older Borderlands titles as I already have them on Steam. Almost bought them on a recent sale cause it really goes cheap these days.
Removed - flaming/arguing; user is banned
@5th313ment no, YOU have a great day! I HOPE YOUR ENTIRE DAY IS REALLY PLEASANT! TAKE THAT!
Removed - trolling; user is banned
Grizzled veteran from BL2 Vita here. Can confirm, that game was ROUGH. Even after all performance patches, still doesn't run well, super long load times, limited amount of enemies on screen, etc. Got to the end game only out of sheer grit and borderlands addiction. Glad to see this is by far the superior port.
Got the game at launch and was pleasantly surprised how well this looks and runs on Switch. Not necessarily the miracle port as some other Switch games but it's definitely a great job by the developers
Edit: The visual style also actually looks (imo) more Borderlands-ish compared to the PS4 version, which tried to go more for realism over cell shaded.
Sorry, but how is a framerate that fluctuates between 30 and 50fps "stable" exactly?
Warning! I have apparently found a game haulting crash. I have gotten to the Blackbarrel Cellars, but whenever I try to zone into the area, the game crashes. It doesn't even let me into the actual area before it crashes and closes. Anyone else having this problem, or know of a solution? I cannot continue my playthrough now because I am stuck trying to get into the Cellars, and it crashes EVERY time I try and continue.
Edit: Opened a ticket on it, and got it resolved. I had to go in and clear the cache on my Switch for my account. Its a pretty roundabout way to go through it, but it did let me continue playing through my game. If anyone else is stuck at this point, I would try giving that a go!
Sounds good but I recently went through this game on my Steam Deck and did damn near everything, including all the DLCs. I think I'm good on a replay lol
@Pupuplatter I think the game struggled at points even on the PS4 Pro especially when it first came out. So the fact that they got it running as well as it does on Switch is amazing.
... and after I inserted the cartridge into the Nintendo Switch, the game was updated by more than 20 gigabytes. The pressing question is why such a physical edition? Bad, bad, bad publishers.
@Pupuplatter mgs1 was never meant to run at 60 fps so you would have to change all the animations and stuff to make it run like that. 2 & 3 are unacceptable though
@Highlar If you have Twitter post this on the dev teams Twitter page. Also send an Email to their support team. They will most likely respond and if more people say something a fix will come sooner
this is imho the best borderlands game of the entire franchise. as far as gameplay goes it does a huge leap forward from the previous entry (which, mark my words, is well within my top 10 games of all times) in terms of variety and add ons, there are some vehicle customization options which were much needed given how much one is bound to travel and shoot by car or monocycle or whatever. the story plays well into adding more characters to the franchise and developing the existing ones. TBH i haven't bought the game and i don't know if i will, I already have exhausted my xbox version several times and I'm still on Sea of Stars right now so I don't really have time for much more. but this is an unmissable 10/10 game
@5th313ment Welcome to the 2020's, western video games have been captured. It is just highly ironic for a series like Borderlands to go from what it originally was to essentially a work of religious devotion to ideology that diametrically opposes what it originally was. But oh well, we must support the current thing!
@betterthanvegas Out of the reactions I watched, I think Felix was my favorite, lol. Game Grumps was really good also, lol. I always get a kick out of people treating ot like a joke until it's no longer funny, lol
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