But the Switch version is still the superior and arranged version of the game, with a lot of new music in its soundtrack, improved graphics and gameplay tweaks.
For fans of the best arcade score-attack game made this generation, the Switch version of 'Don't Die Mr. Robot DX' is the way to go.
And if you dismiss the game for the fact of not having leaderboards, then do the same with the Zerodiv arcade ports of the Psikyo catalogue.
As much as I would love to have leaderboards in the game, it's a Nintendo thing, for not having ready the online service. Yeah, you still see games with leaderboards, but it's because the developers are paying for their own servers. In systems like Steam, for simple online features like leaderboards you can rely in the Steam infrastructure and API. Giving how ultra-niche is the game, how low sales these type of 80s score attack games have, how the game is currently in Europe in the TOP 10 of the worst sellers, I can't blame them for deciding to not invest in paying a dedicated server for leaderboards.
Hopefully, once the online service is available, if learderboards are an automated feature relying in the Nintendo side, like in the rest of modern systems which are integrating this feature (Steam, PSN, Xbox Live), we could see a lot of games patched to include them.
And indeed, there are developers that have said that they are waiting for the release of the online service for including leaderboards, an example is 'Phantom Breaker: Battle Grounds Overdrive'.
And while 'Gonner' finally included leaderboards after a year, and after having said that they were waiting for the Nintendo online service, finally they patched the game by paying dedicated servers, because they were desperate after so many delays in the service. And they made a promise to their users.