The Xenoblade Chronicles series has evolved from a niche JRPG to one of Nintendo’s major franchises. So, there’s no better time for the publisher to dust off the series' black sheep, Xenoblade Chronicles X. Plucked from the depths of the Wii U’s library and refreshed for the Switch, Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition ($59.99) is a remaster of the 2015 original. Updated with new visuals, content, and gameplay elements, the sci-fi RPG still isn't perfect, but it's easier to love and a treat for fans of the series.
What's the Plot?
Xenoblade Chronicles X begins with the end of the world. Humanity, trapped in an intergalactic war between two alien species, flees the Earth on giant interstellar arks. One of the arks, the USS White Whale, manages to slip away to safety. However, the extraterrestrial enemies catch up to the ship and force it to crash-land on a mysterious planet called Mira.
Your character is one of the lucky survivors of the emergency landing. Rescued by Colonel Elma from the military organization known as Blade, you're chauffeured to the newly established New Los Angeles. There, the remnants of humanity work to establish themselves in this strange new world.
Our Experts Have Tested 17 Products in the Nintendo Games Category in the Past Year
Since 1982, PCMag has tested and rated thousands of products to help you make better buying decisions.See how we test.
(Credit: Nintendo/PCMag)
Unlike other titles in the Xenoblade series, Chronicles X lets you create a custom character instead of playing as a pre-established one. Although this change may initially seem innocuous, it removes the emotional drama that propels other entries in the series. Instead, the main driving force is exploration. Your silent player proxy is drafted by Blade and immediately put to work surveying the planet.
Similar Products
4.0
Excellent
Advance Wars 1+2 Re-Boot Camp
Read Our Advance Wars 1+2 Re-Boot Camp Review
4.0
Excellent
Animal Crossing: New Horizons (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Animal Crossing: New Horizons (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
ARMS (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our ARMS (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
Bayonetta 2 (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Bayonetta 2 (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
Bayonetta 3 (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Bayonetta 3 (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Bayonetta Origins: Cereza and the Lost Demon
Read Our Bayonetta Origins: Cereza and the Lost Demon Review
4.0
Excellent
Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Bravely Default II (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Bravely Default II (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Cadence of Hyrule: Crypt of the NecroDancer (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Cadence of Hyrule: Crypt of the NecroDancer (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Cassette Beasts
Read Our Cassette Beasts Review
4.0
Excellent
Clubhouse Games: 51 Worldwide Classics (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Clubhouse Games: 51 Worldwide Classics (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
Game Builder Garage (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Game Builder Garage (for Nintendo Switch) Review
Hades
Indivisible
4.5
Outstanding
Kirby's Return to Dreamland Deluxe
Read Our Kirby's Return to Dreamland Deluxe Review
4.0
Excellent
Kirby and the Forgotten Land (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Kirby and the Forgotten Land (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Kirby Star Allies (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Kirby Star Allies (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom
Read Our The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom Review
3.5
Good
The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword HD (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword HD (for Nintendo Switch) Review
5.0
Exemplary
The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom
Read Our The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom Review
4.0
Excellent
Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga (for Nintendo Switch) Review
Luigi's Mansion 3
4.5
Outstanding
Lumines Remastered (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Lumines Remastered (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Mario & Luigi: Brothership
4.0
Excellent
Mario + Rabbids: Kingdom Battle (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Mario + Rabbids: Kingdom Battle (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Mario Golf: Super Rush (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Mario Golf: Super Rush (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
Mario Kart 8 Deluxe (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Mario Kart 8 Deluxe (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Mario Strikers: Battle League (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Mario Strikers: Battle League (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Mario Tennis Aces (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Mario Tennis Aces (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Marvel vs. Capcom Fighting Collection: Arcade Classics
Read Our Marvel vs. Capcom Fighting Collection: Arcade Classics Review
Metal Slug Tactics
4.5
Outstanding
Metroid Dread (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Metroid Dread (for Nintendo Switch) Review
5.0
Exemplary
Metroid Prime Remastered
Read Our Metroid Prime Remastered Review
3.5
Good
Miitopia (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Miitopia (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Monster Hunter Stories 2: Wings of Ruin (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Monster Hunter Stories 2: Wings of Ruin (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
New Pokemon Snap (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our New Pokemon Snap (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl (for Nintendo Switch) Review
5.0
Exemplary
Nintendo Labo Variety Kit
Read Our Nintendo Labo Variety Kit Review
4.5
Outstanding
Nintendo Labo VR Kit
Read Our Nintendo Labo VR Kit Review
4.0
Excellent
No More Heroes III (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our No More Heroes III (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Penny's Big Breakaway
Read Our Penny's Big Breakaway Review
3.5
Good
Pikmin 3 Deluxe (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Pikmin 3 Deluxe (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
Pikmin 4
Read Our Pikmin 4 Review
Pizza Tower
3.5
Good
Pokemon Legends: Arceus (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Pokemon Legends: Arceus (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Pokemon: Let's Go, Eevee (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Pokemon: Let's Go, Eevee (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Pokemon Scarlet and Violet (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Pokemon Scarlet and Violet (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Pokemon Sword/Shield (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Pokemon Sword/Shield (for Nintendo Switch) Review
3.5
Good
Pokemon Unite (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Pokemon Unite (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown
Read Our Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown Review
4.5
Outstanding
Puyo Puyo Tetris (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Puyo Puyo Tetris (for Nintendo Switch) Review
Red Dead Redemption
Rebel Galaxy Outlaw
Rocket League
Shovel Knight: Treasure Trove
4.0
Excellent
Splatoon 3 (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Splatoon 3 (for Nintendo Switch) Review
Street Fighter 30th Anniversary Collection
Streets of Rage 4
3.5
Good
Super Bomberman R (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Super Bomberman R (for Nintendo Switch) Review
3.5
Good
Super Mario 3D All-Stars (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Super Mario 3D All-Stars (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
Super Mario Bros. Wonder
Read Our Super Mario Bros. Wonder Review
4.5
Outstanding
Super Mario Maker 2 (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Super Mario Maker 2 (for Nintendo Switch) Review
5.0
Exemplary
Super Mario Odyssey (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Super Mario Odyssey (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Super Mario RPG
Read Our Super Mario RPG Review
4.0
Excellent
Super Monkey Ball Banana Mania (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Super Monkey Ball Banana Mania (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.0
Excellent
Tactics Ogre: Reborn
Read Our Tactics Ogre: Reborn Review
Telling Lies
4.0
Excellent
Triangle Strategy (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Triangle Strategy (for Nintendo Switch) Review
Trombone Champ
3.5
Good
Tokyo Mirage Sessions #FE Encore (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our Tokyo Mirage Sessions #FE Encore (for Nintendo Switch) Review
4.5
Outstanding
Unicorn Overlord
Read Our Unicorn Overlord Review
Void Bastards
4.0
Excellent
WarioWare: Get It Together (for Nintendo Switch)
Read Our WarioWare: Get It Together (for Nintendo Switch) Review
This might turn off players who want a deep story. Though the sci-fi story is rife with existential themes, part of what makes the Xenoblade journey memorable is the friends you make along the way. Besides Elma, there's Lin, a super-smart 13-year-old mechanic and cook. However,there aren't many other memorable characters.
(Credit: Nintendo/PCMag)
However, I can better appreciate Xenoblade Chronicles X's vision upon revisiting it in a post-Breath of the Wild world. There’s a sense of freedom and incentivized exploration in X that few open-world games capture. It works because the main character is not you; it's the planet Mira. The game encourages you to explore by rewarding you with experience points whenever you discover a new area or treasure and locking progress behind level and survey requirements.
The opening hours are equal parts exhilarating and frustrating. For example, I'd discover a new area only to be defeated in one shot due to far stronger enemies. That can wear you down in the early moments, but Mira is so gorgeous that it's practically begging you to keep going. Huge mountains paint the horizons as giant trees, vast valleys, and otherworldly architecture fill the spaces in between. That’s not even including New Los Angeles, which can only be described as military installation meets suburbia. There are shades of Avatar, Battlestar Galactica, Mobile Suit Gundam, and Star Trek baked into Xenoblade Chronicles X's world.
This edition also includes a new story chapter that I won't spoil. Unlike Xenoblade Chronicles: Definitive Edition, Xenoblade Chronicles X does require you to beat the game before exploring that new content. It's sure to get Xenoblade fans fired up about the future of the series.
MMO-Like Battles
Exploration aside, the rest of Xenoblade Chronicles X involves battles. The combat system resembles the original Xenoblade Chronicles' MMORPG-like fighting. Your character auto-attacks foes, and a bar of eight special attacks (Arts) line the bottom of the screen. Where and when you deploy Arts matters; it's how you uncover the combat depth.
(Credit: Nintendo/PCMag)
Managing attack cool-downs while stringing together combos led by your teammates' callouts (called Soul Voices) is like an intense game of Simon Says. The combat is usually riddled with party chatter and characters shouting their special moves, which creates a high-energy crescendo of sights and sounds when paired with the excellent battle music. However, new players might find the chaos hard to read.
(Credit: Nintendo/PCMag)
With that in mind, newcomers and veterans will appreciate the Quick Cooldown option, which is new to the Definitive Edition. Upon using it, your character instantly cools down an Art and unleashes it again, letting you deal damage faster and keep combos going for longer. It greatly improves the battle pace, though it’s not something you can spam. You can only activate Quick Cooldown a few times per battle, so it remains useful without ruining the game balance.
Improved Graphics
Other improvements include an updated visual style. Xenoblade Chronicles has an ugly past (just look at the original Wii version), but the series has adopted an attractiveanimeart style sinceXenoblade Chronicles 2. Xenoblade Chronicles X lacks the drastic facelift that Xenoblade Chronicles received, but the main cast has thankfully lost the generic, doll-like aesthetic from the original release (though some NPCs still look worse for wear). The game’s UI is a lot cleaner, too. In fact, Xenoblade Chronicles X might be the most graphically consistent of the three Xenoblade Switch games.
(Credit: Nintendo/PCMag)
The resolution also seems more consistent compared with Xenoblade Chronicles 2 and Xenoblade Chronicles 3. Those titles had a habit of dipping their resolutions during busier scenes, which led to blurry image quality. My only minor complaint is the pop-in, which is sometimes distracting when you arrive at an objective and have to wait a few seconds for the game to load in the character you need to talk to. Overall, Xenoblade Chronicles X has few loading screens. Transitions between areas are seamless and you cantravel to almost everything you see, making cruising across Mira a breeze.
It's Still Not Perfect
Despite the overall improvements, there's a layer of friction in Xenoblade Chronicle X's game design that, for better or worse, separates it from the other releases. For example, the equipment menus are so dense with numbers that my eyes glaze over looking at it. Likewise, I didn't completely understand the money and resource-collecting FrontierNav system until about 60 hours into the story.Some particularly annoying characters and voice acting will test what even anime die-hards can tolerate. Finally, it commits the egregious JRPG sin of taking 20 hours to get good. One of my biggest complaints is how long it takes to earn the license to pilot your Skell, the game's Gundam-like mechs. It takes even longer to learn how to fly the machine.
(Credit: Nintendo/PCMag)
The systems frustrate when they don't work and delight when they do. For example, your Skell has insurance. Every time the mech blows up, you face a timed event that ejects you from the machine. If you nail it, your mech is repaired for free; you lose your Skell’s insurance if you don't. Lose all three insurance stocks, and you're forced to pay a huge chunk of money to repair your mobile suit. You can only repair your Skell in New Los Angeles' barracks, so you must warp back whenever you need to refuel or respawn your Skell. This leads to a lot of unnecessary backtracking.
Nintendo Switch OLED Model and Metroid Dread: We Review the Upgraded Handheld
Verdict: A Welcome Return to Planet Mira
In many ways, Xenoblade Chronicles X had become a white whale for most Xenoblade fans, locked on a console released a decade ago. Now that it's finally available on one of the most popular systems ever, there's never been a better time to play. Improved visuals, combat, and a new story chapter entice returning fans and newcomers alike. Although its opening hours are rough, we encourage you to push through the stubborn early sections to reach the addicting core that more than stands the test of time.
Want more in-depth video game discussion? Visit PCMag's Pop-Off YouTube Channel.
Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition
4.0
See It $59.99 at Best Buy
MSRP $59.99
Pros
-
Improved combat and graphics
-
Huge world to explore
-
Incredible sense of scale
-
Smart changes across the board
View More
Cons
-
A few convoluted gameplay systems
-
Early game moments are a slog
The Bottom Line
Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition arrives on the Nintendo Switch with new gameplay mechanics, updated graphics, and a fresh story to delight new and returning fans.
Like What You're Reading?
Sign up for Lab Report to get the latest reviews and top product advice delivered right to your inbox.
This newsletter may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. By clicking the button, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe from the newsletters at any time.
Thanks for signing up!
Your subscription has been confirmed. Keep an eye on your inbox!
Sign up for other newsletters
I’m an Analyst and ISF-certified TV calibrator focused on reviewing computer accessories, laptops, gaming monitors, and video games. I’ve been writing, playing, and complaining about games for as long as I remember, but it wasn’t until recently that I’ve been able to shout my opinions directly at a larger audience. My work has appeared on iMore, Windows Central, Android Central, and TWICE, and I have a diverse portfolio of editing work under my belt from my time spent at Scholastic and Oxford University Press. I also have a few book-author credits under my belt—I’ve contributed to the sci-fi anthology Under New Suns, and I’ve even written a Peppa Pig book.
Read Zackery's full bio
Read the latest from Zackery Cuevas
- LG 27 UltraGear OLED (27GX790A) Review
- The Best Wireless Gaming Mice for 2025
- HP Omen Transcend 32 OLED Review
- Alienware 27 4K QD-OLED (AW2725Q) Review
- Lenovo's AI Monitor Concept Could Bring a Local LLM to Your Non-AI PC
- More from Zackery Cuevas