Introduction
Basic information
Developer Name: Sonic Team
Full Name: Sonic Generations (Remastered) – included within Sonic x Shadow Generations
Release Date: 2024
Released on: Switch 2, PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PC
Cross Play: No
Initial thoughts
Booting up Sonic Generations Remaster on the Switch 2 immediately hit me with nostalgia. I adored the original game, but it undeniably suffered from uneven visuals, occasional input delays, and a few stages that overstayed their welcome. So this remaster had a lot to prove for me personally.
As soon as I started playing, it became clear that Sonic Team took this remaster seriously. Visual polish, improved responsiveness, smoother framerates, almost every complaint I had about the original was addressed.
Well… almost every complaint.
Planet Wisp still exists. Planet Wisp still tortures my soul. And no amount of remastering can fix the fact that the original Sonic Colors level design is, frankly, a mess. But outside that specific blemish, the remaster absolutely delivers.
Story and setting
Plot overview
I noticed subtle improvements in the script, nothing radically rewritten, but enough to make interactions flow more naturally. Sonic still behaves like Sonic: irreverent, carefree, constantly joking until the stakes finally hit home. That classic charm is intact and arguably polished.
The build-up to Super Sonic feels much more natural here than the messy sudden transformation tone issues seen in Sonic Frontiers. The remastered cutscenes enhance pacing, helping scenes land with greater clarity without overhauling the goofy, energetic essence the franchise is known for.
Is it Shakespeare? Absolutely not.
Is it Sonic having fun jumping across timelines while beating up corrupted versions of iconic bosses? Absolutely, yes.
World building and immersion
The central hub, the white void where time collapses looks cleaner, brighter, and more visually coherent. Levels feel more connected, not through lore but through presentation. What the game sets out to do, celebrate the franchise’s best moments, it does with style, clarity, and confidence.
Each world invites you to appreciate Sonic history without requiring convoluted explanations. Immersion comes from revisiting beloved zones with modern visuals and improved movement rather than from narrative complexity.
Character development
Character development isn’t the focus here, but the remaster does add subtle warmth to the interactions between Classic Sonic, Modern Sonic, and the supporting cast. Sonic remains Sonic, Tails remains Tails, and the dynamic between Classic and Modern gives a little extra charm to the celebrations of each stage.
Emotional impact
There’s something incredibly satisfying about seeing levels like City Escape, Sky Sanctuary, and Perfect Chaos rendered this beautifully. The emotional impact isn’t built through story beats, it comes from re-experiencing peak Sonic moments with new fidelity that hits your nostalgic nerves perfectly.
When the music swells and you boost through a recreation of your childhood memories, the game earns every emotional moment effortlessly.
Rating for story and setting
I have visited multiple aspects of the story, and after some thought and objective thinking, I rated the story and setting with an 8
Gameplay and mechanics
Core gameplay mechanics
This is where the remaster shines the brightest. Classic Sonic and Modern Sonic feel distinct yet polished in ways the original never fully achieved.
Classic Sonic has tighter platforming and more faithful physics.
Modern Sonic has smoother boosting and more responsive drift mechanics.
Skills return and still allow subtle gameplay tweaks, though I do wish a few more were added. Still, the existing skill loadout does a fantastic job enhancing replayability and personalizing your preferred style.
Difficulty and balance
Difficulty is fair and rewarding. S-ranking stages require consistency and pattern mastery, but never feels punishing or unfair. I S-ranked everything, including bosses and challenges, and the game encouraged mastery rather than brute forcing. Planet Wisp remains the exception, but that’s entirely a level design issue inherited from Colors, not this remaster.
Pacing of the game
Pacing is energetic and smooth. Levels are short but exhilarating, and switching between Classic and Modern prevents burnout. The challenges sprinkled throughout the hub world provide breaks in intensity while still offering meaningful gameplay variety.
Innovation and uniqueness
While it’s a remaster, not a reinvention, the improvements are meaningful. Lighting, physics consistency, input responsiveness, and refined boost behavior give this version an identity that goes beyond simple upscaling.
Controls and user interface
Controls on the Switch 2 feel incredibly crisp. It’s honestly hard to go back to the original after experiencing this precision. The UI is mostly unchanged but remains clean, readable, and functional.
Microtransactions
None, and thank goodness for that. No boosters, no passes, no cosmetics. It’s classic Sonic gaming with no corporate nonsense attached.
Rating
After combing through many of the mechanics, the pacing, and other factors of this game, I rated the gameplay and mechanics with a 9.3
Graphics and art style
Quality of graphics and art direction
The remaster is gorgeous. Lighting is vastly improved, textures feel sharper, and animations look smoother. Seeing Perfect Chaos in this quality is jaw-dropping, it’s the kind of visual treatment that makes you think, If they remade Sonic Adventure with this tech, it would be spectacular. (No, Sonic Colors does not count.)
Technical performances
Stable framerates, fast loading times, and minimal stuttering highlight the Switch 2’s improved hardware. Even high-speed Modern Sonic sections run incredibly well.
Environment and design uniqueness
Each zone retains its original art direction but with modern enhancements that make them pop. From the bright city lights in Rooftop Run to the serene ruins in Sky Sanctuary, every stage feels revitalized without losing its identity.
Rating
It took me some time to give the graphics and art style an objective rating. There are many things to consider, but ultimately, I rated this section with a 9.5
Sound and music
Music score and how it contributed to the game
It’s Sonic. It’s legendary. The remixed tracks and enhanced sound clarity elevate already-iconic tracks to new heights. The music alone is an easy 10, no hesitation.
Sound effects quality
Sound effects are crisp and satisfying, especially boost and homing attack impacts. Everything feels punchier without being overwhelming.
Voice Acting
The voice cast is still fantastic. Sonic’s personality shines through, and the supporting cast delivers exactly what fans expect: energetic, light-hearted performances.
Rating
After a lot of consideration, I rated the sound and music section with a 10
Replayability
Game Length and content volume
Sonic Generations Remaster strikes an excellent balance between concise design and substantial content. A standard playthrough that focuses only on clearing stages will finish relatively quickly, but that would be doing the game a disservice. The real content volume reveals itself when engaging with what the game is actually built for: mastery.
Fully completing the game, including S-ranking every stage, (Planet Wisp not included), clearing all challenges, collecting red rings, and defeating every boss at the highest performance level, significantly extends playtime. This is not filler content; each challenge meaningfully tests movement precision, route optimization, and mechanical understanding of both Classic and Modern Sonic.
Extra Content
There are tons of challenges, missions, alternate paths, collectables, and S-rank goals. Some players may find the sheer number of challenges overwhelming, but for completionists, this is bliss.
Replay value
Replay value is extremely high. Movement-based gameplay, skill tweaking, and speedrun potential make this a game you can revisit endlessly. The only drawback is that Planet Wisp still exists, but thankfully, you can mostly ignore it after initial completion.
Rating
After thoughtful consideration, I decided to rate the replayability and game length with a 9.2.
Suggestions and comparisons
Suggestions and feedback
Add a few more skills to deepen gameplay variety.
Modernize Planet Wisp or streamline its flow. (Or, you know, replace it.)
Consider adding a few bonus challenges pulling from Sonic Adventure.
Future remasters should consider optional stage swaps or alternatives for divisive levels.
Comparisons
Compared to the original Sonic Generations:
Movement is tighter
Visuals are massively better
Performance is flawless
The entire experience feels more cohesive
Compared to modern Sonic games, this remaster shows how powerful the boost formula can be when polished correctly.
Personal experiences and anecdotes
Seeing Perfect Chaos with modern graphics made my jaw drop, I replayed the fight just to hear the music again. Boosting through Sky Sanctuary still feels magical. Rooftop Run remains peak Sonic design.
Every moment reminded me that this remaster captures the essence of why Sonic Generations was great, but now refined into something even more satisfying. I S-ranked every challenge, messed around with all skills, and revisited stages multiple times. The only thing I avoided?
Planet Wisp. And honestly, even the remaster can’t fix what Sonic Colors created.
Rating
Taking in all the personal experiences with Sonic Generations Remastered, I give it a personal rating of 9.5.
Last words
Pros
- Gorgeous remastered visuals
- Perfectly smooth performance
- Classic + Modern Sonic both feel fantastic
- Improved physics
- Sharper controls
- Enhanced cutscenes
- Massive replay value
- Lots of challenges
- Tight boost mechanics
- Faithful Classic Sonic platforming
- Quick load times
- Refined lighting and effects
- Better script pacing
- World hub is cleaner and more pleasant
Cons
- Planet Wisp still exists
- Limited new skills
- Some challenge missions may feel excessive to casual players
Sonic Generations Remaster is everything a remaster should be: polished, respectful, revitalized, and infinitely replayable. It preserves the charm of the original while elevating nearly every aspect, proving that Retro Sonic and Modern Sonic can coexist in perfect harmony.
If Sega ever decides to remake Sonic Adventure, this remaster shows they have the capability to make something extraordinary. No, Sonic Colors still does not count since that game was an unfixable mess to begin with.
FINAL RATING
9.6
Please let me know what you think of Sonic Generations Remastered in the comments!
I hope you enjoyed reading this review. I hope to see you in the next review!
If you liked reading this review, maybe you would like to share this review with your friends.