REPO is a huge success on PC. However, what about consoles? Will the game offer support for crossplay?
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Once in a while, indie coop horror games appear on Steam and become instant hits. Probably many of you remember Lethal Company or Content Warning. Last week, R.E.P.O. was released and attracted a lot of interest from players. The game gathered over 61 000 players at its peak on Steam (via SteamDB). But what about console ports and crossplay support?
REPO, just like Lethal Company, is a co-op oriented horror game. You can play with up to 6 players (or even more, if you install a mod). So, it’s pretty obvious that the more people get together the more fun it is.
Of course, in each group of friends there is always that one die-hard console player. Can such a person also join the adventure? The answer is simple. No. REPO doesn’t have crossplay support for at least one (but extremally important) reason – the game is available only in early access on PC (via Steam) right now. We still don’t know if there will be any ports at all. Right now, you have to be patient and wait for the future announcements.
Still, you can try to run this game on PC. REPO doesn’t have particularly high hardware requirements. It is enough to have a 10-year-old graphic card to start it. So, if you have a computer at all, there is a chance for you.
Minimum | Recommended | |
Processor | Intel Core i5-6600 | Intel Core i7-8700 |
Memory | 8 GB RAM | 8 GB RAM |
Graphics card | GeForce GTX 970 | GeForce GTX 1070 |
Storage | 1 GB | 1 GB |
OS | Windows 10 | Windows 11 |
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Author: Agnes Adamus
Associated with gamepressure.com since 2017. She started with guides and now mainly creates for the newsroom, encyclopedia, and marketing. Self-proclaimed free-to-play games expert. Loves strategy games, simulators, RPGs, and horrors. She also has a weakness for online games. Spent an indecent number of hours in Dead by Daylight and Rainbow Six: Siege. Besides that, she likes horror movies (the worse, the better) and listen to music. Her greatest passion, however, is for trains. On paper, a medical physicist. In fact, a humanist who has loved games since childhood.