Is Daemon X Machina Titanic Scion Crossplay?
Yes, Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion supports crossplay, and it’s legit crossplay — not the usual marketing fluff. You can fire it up on PC, Switch 2, PlayStation 5, or Xbox Series X|S and actually play together online, whether you’re running story missions or diving into boss battles. This isn’t just for some tiny multiplayer mode; the demo even lets you experience nine chapters, goof around in co-op, and try out the meaty open world, regardless of which box (or handheld) is humming away on your desk or lap.
Honestly, I wish this was standard for every online game in 2025. My group chat’s like a hardware zoo — someone just jumped to Steam Deck, one guy is glued to Switch 2 on his lunch break, and I’m over here with an ancient Windows desktop I refuse to upgrade. With Titanic Scion’s demo out, we all download it, jump in, and chaos ensues. I’m zipping around in a brightly painted Arsenal mech (decided to paint it “banana” just to annoy everyone), someone else is stuck in the tutorial, yelling about bad camera angles, and meanwhile not a single one of us is asking “Wait, what system are you on?” I could get teary. It’s very “future is now”.
But I’ll be real: previous Daemon X Machina titles teased cross-save, then we hit walls — Switch and Steam could trade saves, but couldn’t link up for multiplayer. This always felt like a cruel joke for anyone hoping for a cross-platform community. Titanic Scion finally pulled it off, and if the full release keeps this up (demo impressions are promising so far!), we’re looking at a model that other devs need to steal immediately.
There are a couple of quirks worth mentioning. Crossplay’s seamless for co-op, but the group cap at three players might limit bigger squads (so far). And save data goes with you to the full game, but only if you stick with the same platform — so don’t expect to start on Switch and finish on PC, at least not with your hero’s progress intact.