Reviews

Skabma – Snowfall review for Nintendo Switch, PC, PlayStation, Xbox

Platform: Nintendo Switch
Platform: PC, PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X
Publisher: Plug In Digital
Developer: Red Stage Entertainment
Medium: Digital
Players: 1
Online: No
ESRB: T

I was genuinely excited to play Skabma – Snowfall. It’s been on my Steam Wishlist for months, so when I saw we were getting a Switch port of the game, I jumped at the chance to review it.

Now that I’ve played the Switch version, however, I’m thinking I probably should have gotten it on Steam. Or PS4/PS5. Really, anywhere other than the Switch, because this port is…not good.

And the reason why Skabma – Snowfall on the Switch isn’t good is that the game barely runs on Nintendo’s system. At the very best of times, the world looks fuzzy and prone to popping in and out of existence around you. It’ll stutter for a moment here and there while the game saves your progress. It’s mostly playable, but it won’t be a very fun experience.

Again, that’s the best-case scenario. When Skabma – Snowfall really gets into a mood, everything just shudders to a halt while you get hit with a loading screen – and not just your standard, between-scenes loading screen, either, but the world in front of you will literally just say “Loading”. It makes it hard to get immersed in a game’s narrative when your character’s path forward is blocked by a giant, floating wall of text.

Mind you, at least the text walls were temporary. Far more annoying were the places where your character ran into invisible walls, and there was no reason why he shouldn’t have been able to move forward. Similarly, the physics in Skabma – Snowfall are fairly inconsistent, and you never could tell whether a jump forward would launch you across a gap, send you plunging downwards into a barely-there hole, or leave you jumping in place because the same simply didn’t want you going in some direction.

This is all deeply unfortunate, because Skabma – Snowfall is a game that it’s hard not to root for. It’s the first-ever game to portray Sámi culture, which means you get a look at a world – that of the Indigenous peoples of Northern Europe, to be precise – that you don’t usually get to see. You’re guiding a young boy named Áilu through a quest to save his village, and along the way you get an education into his culture. It all feels very worthwhile.

The thing is, at least as far as the Switch version goes, you need to dig deep in order to see all that – and honestly, it’s hard to say that it’s worth it, all things considered. I’ve no doubt that Skabma – Snowfall is a very interesting, enjoyable game on systems that can handle it, but unfortunately the Switch isn’t one of those systems.

Plug In Digital provided us with a Skabma – Snowfall Nintendo Switch code for review purposes.

Grade: C
Matthew Pollesel

Recent Posts

The Turtle Beach Stealth Pro II takes on Jinichi Kawakami, Japan’s real-life last ninja

An actual ninja is apparently no match for Turtle Beach's upcoming premium wireless gaming headset.

6 hours ago

Beast of Reincarnation rounds up pre-order details and a new trailer

Commit to Game Freak's "one-person, one-dog action RPG" and get a valuable bonus pack and…

6 hours ago

The Kodansha House heads West for Anime Expo 2026 for the first time this July

I’m kind of shocked it didn’t start out West first…

7 hours ago

Teamwork will help you survive the climb in the Ascend the Shinra Tower – Final Fantasy VII Boardgame

I’ll give this one a shot when they put out a remake decades later.

1 day ago

Splatoon Raiders scores an official date and new media showing off some fresh n’ inky Splatoon spinoff action

The Switch 2 single player Splatoon action title has a release date, pre-orders, new trailer…

1 day ago

This website uses cookies.