![]() As mentioned before the central offering is Diamond Dynasty, a team-building mode where you assemble a roster by earning Packs and Cards, which is a very baseball way to approach the 'Ultimate Team' model. In the case of MLB The Show 22, if you're a baseball fan that means a lot of variety and options. Yes, this may be partly to ensure the best monetisation possible from the online 'Diamond Dynasty', but the end result is a full package on Switch with absolutely no content cut. That's not the case here, with developer Sony San Diego continuing its good work - since its move to Xbox a year ago - of parity across all versions in terms of content. In the high profile sport-sim example of FIFA in particular, Nintendo players have had to tolerate half-baked annual releases lacking key features, modes and other content. The strangeness of booting it up aside, the first impressions of this Switch entry are reassuring impressive, actually. Nevertheless here we are, with a Sony Interactive Entertainment game on Nintendo Switch. It's unclear how eager Sony was to support the Switch with baseball juggernaut MLB The Show 22, as the series' move to Xbox and now Nintendo's hybrid came at the behest of Major League Baseball. Now over five years old, the Switch continues to delight and - despite the ageing technology within the diminutive tablet - we still have third-parties eager to support the system. Captured on Nintendo Switch (Handheld/Undocked) ![]()
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