
BT:Saints Row IV justifies its re-skin of Steelport with plentiful content and a brilliant new way of exploring the city. But its attempt to blend so many different genres, sci-fi, superheroes and cyberpunk, results in a lack of cohesion and the game failing to capitalise on its strongest features. Still, like we said before, Saints Row doesn't do things because they make sense, it does them because they're fun, and it delivers that by the truckload.

Remember this year's Saints Row(opens in new tab)? Volition would probably prefer that you didn't, which might go some way to explaining why the studio recently decided to upgrade everyone's copy of Saints Row 4(opens in new tab) to its full-fat Re-elected Edition, containing all the game's story and cosmetic DLC and even introducing cross-play between Steam, Epic, and GOG versions of the game.
Unfortunately, that upgrade seems to have backfired, and players now report a myriad of bugs with their new version of SR4. Both the Saints Row Steam forums(opens in new tab) and subreddit(opens in new tab) are filled with players complaining of broken saves, crashes, and mods failing to function. It's also received a few hundred negative Steam reviews(opens in new tab) since the update. If it's succeeded in washing the taste of Saints Row (2022) out of players' mouths, it's only because it tastes even worse.
I wonder if Volition's getting reorged under Gearbox impacted the quality of their release.

When it comes ranking the Saints Row games, there are a couple of weird ones you have to consider, though this is Saints Row after all.

Juan at SwitchWatchTV got his hands on Saints Row 4 Re-elected for Nintendo Switch. Check out his review here and see what he thinks.