Multiple consoles
-
If I own the game for both ps5 and switch are they completely seperate or does things like DD RTTS or franchise carry over system to system
-
@jlower_PSN said in Multiple consoles:
If I own the game for both ps5 and switch are they completely seperate or does things like DD RTTS or franchise carry over system to system
They carry over. Someone shared how to do it in here. Just use the search tool.
-
I just moved from PS to Xbox - check out this thread - go to the link that @Blind_Bleeder sent:
https://forums.theshow.com/topic/65408/new-xbox-set-up-moving-from-ps5
-
@jlower_PSN said in Multiple consoles:
If I own the game for both ps5 and switch are they completely seperate or does things like DD RTTS or franchise carry over system to system
When you have copies of the game for multiple consoles and want to have the same progression on all of your copies, you need to link your accounts. The most important thing in the process is to make sure you choose the account that has most of your progression as your main account.
If you’ve played games on both consoles without linking, you will have different progression points on each console.
When you link, the games do not merge. Your main account is what you will see. If you have earned cards or stubs before linking, you will not see them on your sub accounts until you unlink everything.
After linking, game progression, cards, and EARNED stubs will be the same on all linked accounts. If you buy stubs from a console, those stubs stay with that console until they are spent, and then whatever you buy wither is thrown into the main pot.
I began with a PS5 and then got a Switch. A year later, I got an Xbox and added that to my linked accounts. Now I can play on all three and never miss a beat.
https://forums.theshow.com/topic/49818/switch-successfully-linked?_=1693402661361
For RTTS and MTO, you may need to save your stuff to the cloud and then download it on the other console you are playing on. I don’t know if Franchise falls under this same category or not. Let us know! I think @arvcpa_MLBTS might have some insight on that.
-