Preorders for the physical edition of the remaster go live on January 15.
Independent game merchant Limited Run Games will deliver actual duplicates of the remastered rendition of Scott Pilgrim versus the World: The Game for Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 4, the organization reported on Twitter. Xbox variants of the game will show up “sometime not too far off.”
There are three versions of Scott Pilgrim versus the World: The Game accessible through Limited Run Games, with preorders going live for about a month and a half beginning on January 15 at 7 AM PT/10 AM ET. Close by the $35 Standard Edition for Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 4, the organization will drop two other jam-pressed forms: the $55 Classic Edition and $140 K.O. Release.
The Classic Edition incorporates the actual game on one or the other stage, a full-shading guidance booklet, a reversible cover, a grand clamshell case with a different reversible cover, a sticker sheet, an actual CD soundtrack by the chiptune-based pop-musical crew Anamanaguchi, a dedicatory show pass, and an overworld map, across the board smooth looking box.
Then, the K.O. Release includes things similar to the Classic Edition, to say the very least. This incorporates a hardcover manual, CD and tape of the Anamanaguchi soundtrack, full-size wooden alcoholic sticks decorated with game craftsmanship, three diverse checked guitar picks, a Scott Pilgrim stacking screen polish pin, two sticker sheets, and, obviously, the game itself.
It comes heaped inside a useful stage with working lights and sounds that go about as a gatherer’s case. Scott Pilgrim versus the World: The Game is a 2D beat-them-up dependent on Bryan Lee O’Malley’s realistic novel of a similar name. The title initially dropped on Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 in August 2010 before being delisted in December 2014.
Ubisoft announced that the beat-’em-up will return during its September 2020 Ubisoft Forward event, confirming that the game will hit the digital Nintendo Switch, PC, PlayStation 4, Stadia, and Xbox One stores on January 14.