Zenless Zone Zero Compared on PC, PS5, and Mobile: A Video Reveals the Differences

ZENLESS ZONE ZERO: IS IT BETTER TO CHOOSE BELLA OR WISE AT THE BEGINNING OF THE FREE GAME?

Zenless Zone Zero Compared on PC PS5 and Mobile: A Video Reveals the Differences

ElAnalistaDeBits has created a video comparison between the PC, PS5 and mobile versions of Zenless Zone Zero, highlighting the technical differences present on the platforms in question.

Zenless Zone Zero has been compared on PC, PS5 and mobile by ElAnalistaDeBits, who in a video highlighted the differences in the free-to-play action RPG developed by miHoYo on the platforms in question.

Building on the experience gained with Genshin Impact, the Chinese studio has managed to package a truly solid experience regardless of the system it runs on, as demonstrated by the performance of Zenless Zone Zero even on an Oppo Find X5 Pro, despite the presence of a block that does not allow you to go beyond 30 fps.

The PS5 and PC versions are a different story: the former runs at dynamic 4K and 60 fps with a single graphics mode, while the latter can obviously aspire to different results depending on the hardware configuration, obtaining an advantage in terms of reflections, ambient occlusion and shadows in the best case scenario.

In general, the developers have cut back on some elements on smartphones , decreasing the quality of textures and the amount of cast shadows, eliminating some post-processing effects and lowering the resolution of the cubemaps used for reflections.

A great visual impact

Available today on PC, PS5 and mobile, Zenless Zone Zero can be downloaded for free and aims to churn out numbers that are if possible higher than those of miHoYo’s previous successes, also given the high level of participation in the beta phases.

Zenless Zone Zero Compared on PC PS5 and Mobile: A Video Reveals the Differences

As you can see in the video, the developers have once again relied on the cel-shaded anime style that worked so well for Genshin Impact and Honkai: Star Rail, and which we find here in an even more enjoyable version.