The PS5 version struggles, but the underlying game is a masterpiece. Here’s our honest review.
📦 The Context: Why No Console Review Codes?
If you follow game launches, you noticed something suspicious: no console review codes were sent out before release. Only PC builds went to critics. I didn’t get my PS5 code until a week after launch. That’s never a good sign. It turns out Pearl Abyss knew exactly what they were doing. The base PS5 version was – and to some extent still is – not ready for prime time. Multiple patches have improved things since launch, but the core issues remain. This isn’t a hatchet job. I genuinely love parts of this game. But potential customers deserve to know what they’re walking into.
1. Three Display Modes – None Are Perfect
The PS5 version offers three display modes: Performance, Balanced, and Quality. Each has serious trade‑offs.
Performance Mode – Avoid at All Costs
On paper, 1080p at 60 fps sounds fine. Many games deliver that cleanly. But Crimson Desert’s Performance Mode is a disaster: the framerate fluctuates constantly – 60 fps is rarely sustained. No upscaling means no FSR or PSSR. The image is so soft and blurry that it hurts to look at, even on a large 4K TV. A post‑launch patch improved things slightly, but it’s still the worst way to play.
“The result is an image so soft and blurry that I’d rather not play at all.”
Balanced Mode – The Sweet Spot (If You Have the Right TV)
Balanced Mode targets 40 fps – a weird number, but it works well on 120Hz displays because 40 divides evenly into 120. The internal resolution is higher than Performance Mode, and visual clarity is a significant step up. Requirements: A 120Hz‑compatible TV or monitor. Without that, Balanced Mode defaults to something else (likely 30 fps with tearing). Verdict: If you have a 120Hz display, this is the way to play. The framerate holds much closer to target, and the image looks decent.
Quality Mode – Sharp but Sluggish
Quality Mode locks to 30 fps and provides the sharpest image quality. Textures look better. Draw distance improves. Water reflections almost shimmer correctly. The problem: Crimson Desert relies heavily on parry timing and dodge windows. At 30 fps, combat feels sluggish and laggy. You’ll miss parries you would have landed at 60 fps. Boss fights become exercises in frustration, not skill.
“Even outside of Performance Mode, the base PS5 struggles in specific cases. Large enemy hideouts and densely populated towns cause stutters and tears across all three modes.”
2. Image Quality – Beautiful Vision, Muddy Execution
Crimson Desert’s art direction is genuinely stunning. Pearl Abyss’s BlackSpace Engine renders the continent of Pywel as one continuous space. I stood on a hilltop early on and could pick out individual settlements on the horizon. The sense of scale is breathtaking. But on base PS5, much of that vision gets buried.
PS5 Pro comparison: Ray tracing enabled across all three modes. Balanced Mode runs at 1440p upscaled to 4K. Quality Mode delivers native 4K at locked 30 fps with ultra‑quality ray tracing. The contrast is wild. Watching PS5 Pro footage online made me genuinely sad – the game I was playing could look that good, but my hardware couldn’t deliver it.
3. Quality of Life – The Hidden Frustration
Beyond framerate and visuals, Crimson Desert on PS5 has a second layer of roughness: its user interface and control scheme.
The Controller Scheme – Why Is Jump on Square?
You cannot rebind controls on console. That’s already a problem. But the default layout is genuinely baffling:
- Jump: Square – Most games use X (or A on Xbox). Muscle memory betrayal.
- Sprint: Repeatedly tap X – Why not hold L3 or a shoulder button? Tapping while moving is awkward.
- Interact: Triangle – Fine, but inconsistent context prompts.
- Dodge: Circle – Standard, at least.
The sprint issue is the worst offender. Repeatedly tapping X while also using the right stick to control the camera? It’s ergonomically terrible. Your thumb can’t be in two places at once.
Menus and Text – Cluttered and Tiny
- Menus are cluttered and convoluted – too many submenus, inconsistent navigation.
- Text sizes are too small for couch gaming on a 4K TV. You’ll squint.
- The game does very little to explain its multitude of systems (crafting, alchemy, companion management, faction reputation). You’re left to figure it out or Google.
Load Times – Abysmally Slow
- From main menu to in‑game: over a minute.
- Fast travel between distant points: 30–45 seconds.
- Respawning after death: 20–30 seconds.
On a console with a blazing‑fast NVMe SSD, this is unacceptable. Other open‑world games (Elden Ring, Spider‑Man 2) load in 5–10 seconds. Crimson Desert’s load times feel like a generation behind.
4. The Positives – Why I Kept Playing
After all that negativity, you might wonder: why did I sink dozens of hours into this game? Why not just quit? Because Pywel is one of the most captivating open worlds I’ve ever explored.
The Exploration Loop
Here’s what happens in Crimson Desert – on any platform, even the struggling PS5: Set a waypoint to a main quest marker. Spot an interesting ruin off the path – go investigate. Find a puzzle that rewards a rare crafting material. While solving the puzzle, see a smoke plume in the distance – enemy camp. Clear the camp, find a treasure map, which points to another location. Two hours later, realize you never reached the original waypoint.
“The loop of curiosity, failure, and earned payoff is something very few open world games get right, and Crimson Desert nails it.”
That’s the magic. The world is dense with meaningful distractions. Not copy‑paste bandit camps or generic fetch quests – but actual discoveries that reward exploration.
Combat – When It Works
When the framerate holds (which is more often in Balanced Mode), combat is genuinely satisfying. Parries feel weighty. Dodges are responsive. The variety of enemy types – from human soldiers to monstrous creatures – keeps fights fresh. Boss fights are highlights. They’re difficult (sometimes unfairly so), but beating them gives a real sense of accomplishment. The issue is that frame drops during boss battles turn difficulty into frustration.

No Bugs (Surprisingly)
Outside of performance issues, the base PS5 version is relatively stable. I encountered very few bugs – no quests breaking, no crashes, no save corruption. Pearl Abyss clearly tested for stability, even if they couldn’t fix the framerate.
DualSense Features
Credit where it’s due: the game uses haptic feedback and adaptive triggers well. You feel the tension of a drawn bowstring. Different weapons have different trigger resistance. It’s not genre‑defining, but it’s appreciated.
5. Patches and Future Improvements
Pearl Abyss has already shipped multiple patches since launch, addressing the worst issues: slight improvements to Performance Mode image quality, stability fixes in crowded areas, some load time optimizations (though still slow). The devs are clearly paying attention to community feedback. That’s encouraging. The game will only get better with time – but right now, on base PS5, it’s not where it should be.
📊 Summary Table: Pros and Cons of Crimson Desert on Base PS5
💬 BuyCarry Team’s Take
We help players overcome frustration – whether it’s difficult bosses, confusing systems, or simply wanting to skip the grind. Crimson Desert on PS5 is a perfect example of a game where our services add value.
What We See: Performance issues are frustrating, but they don’t make the game unplayable. If you’re struggling with boss fights due to frame drops, our coaches can help you adjust your timing and strategy to compensate. The UI and systems are needlessly complex. Many players will waste hours figuring out crafting, alchemy, or companion mechanics. Our guides and coaching can shortcut that learning curve. Load times are annoying but not something we can fix – but while you wait, you could be reading our optimization tips.
👥 Who Should Buy Crimson Desert on PS5 Right Now?
🎮 Our Crimson Desert Services
- ⚔️ Crimson Desert Boss Coaching – Master parry timing and dodge windows even with frame drops, conquer every boss
- 🗺️ Crimson Desert Exploration & Build Guides – Optimized routes, crafting shortcuts, and system explanations to save hours
- 🎮 Crimson Desert Co‑op & Walkthrough – Let our pros guide you through the rough spots while you enjoy the world
⭐ Verdict from the BuyCarry Team
Crimson Desert on base PS5 is a diamond in the rough – literally and figuratively. The rough is significant: blurry Performance Mode, sluggish Quality Mode, baffling controls, slow loads, and cluttered UI. But the diamond – that open world, that exploration loop, that sense of discovery – is genuine and rare.
Who should buy now? Players with a PS5 Pro or a 120Hz display who can use Balanced Mode. Also, hardcore open‑world fans who value exploration over technical polish. Who should wait? Everyone else. Give Pearl Abyss a few more patch cycles. The game will improve. You might even catch a discount.
Our final rating (base PS5): 6.5/10 – held back by performance, but the underlying game is an 8.5/10. Our final rating (PS5 Pro / PC): 8.5/10 – genuinely excellent.
If you’re patient, Crimson Desert will reward you. If you’re not patient, let us help you through the rough parts. Either way, don’t miss this world entirely – it’s worth experiencing, even on struggling hardware.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
- Q1: Is Crimson Desert on base PS5 unplayable?
A: No. But it’s rough. Performance Mode is blurry; Quality Mode is sluggish. Balanced Mode on a 120Hz display is the best experience. - Q2: Will Pearl Abyss fix these issues?
A: They’ve already released multiple patches, and they’re listening to feedback. Expect continued improvements, but don’t expect a miracle – the base PS5 hardware is limited. - Q3: Should I buy Crimson Desert on PS5 or wait for PC?
A: If you have a decent PC, buy it there. The game runs significantly better on high‑end hardware. If you only have a base PS5, consider waiting for a sale. - Q4: Can I rebind controls on PS5?
A: No. The game does not support controller rebinding on console. You have to adapt to the default layout (jump on Square, tap X to sprint). - Q5: How long are load times?
A: From main menu to game: over 60 seconds. Fast travel: 30–45 seconds. Respawning: 20–30 seconds. - Q6: Does BuyCarry offer help with Crimson Desert?
A: Yes – coaching for bosses, builds, exploration, and system explanations. We also provide written guides and walkthroughs. Contact us to skip the frustration.
Source: “Crimson Desert is Impressive But Rough on Consoles” – expanded analysis with additional testing and commentary.

