Despite a somewhat rocky launch, Mortal Kombat: Legacy Kollection has continued to evolve steadily through a series of updates—and now it appears to have reached the point where most of the community’s long-standing requests have finally been addressed.
Digital Eclipse has released a substantial new patch for the collection, headlined by the addition of its most anticipated feature alongside a handful of other meaningful improvements.
The biggest change is the introduction of cross-platform play, allowing players to compete against one another regardless of system. Whether on PlayStation, Xbox, PC, or Nintendo Switch, fans can now connect and fight across platforms without restrictions.
There is a small caveat, however: Mortal Kombat Trilogy will not support Krossplay on original Switch hardware due to technical limitations, though the feature remains available across other supported platforms.
Krossplay can be used in both Quick Play and Online Arcade modes, but players will need to manually enable it in the settings menu before jumping into matches.
In addition, the update expands online functionality for 2v2 combat. Titles including Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 (arcade), Ultimate MK3 (SNES), Mortal Kombat Trilogy (PS1), and Mortal Kombat 4 (arcade) now support online team-based battles—bringing previously offline-only modes into full online play.
The patch also introduces Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) support on modern hardware and PC. When enabled, VRR allows the games to run closer to their original arcade timing of roughly 53 Hz instead of the standard 60 Hz, offering a more authentic presentation and potentially reduced input latency for supported displays.
Beyond these headline additions, the update includes several quality-of-life fixes, such as improved connection strength indicators, restored Kombat Kard replay functionality, and corrected localization issues.
According to Digital Eclipse, this patch represents the final major feature update planned for Mortal Kombat: Legacy Kollection. Future support will continue in the form of smaller updates focused on bug fixes and stability improvements rather than new systems or content.
Full patch notes confirm a wide range of adjustments, but the overall direction is clear: the collection has now reached its feature-complete state, with only refinement work left ahead.
