[quote]As part of Sony's big PlayStation 5 information blowout during a GDC livestream, the company officially announced the specs for the next-generation console. In short, it's a very powerful machine.
PlayStation system architect Mark Cerny is discussing the PS5 hardware as we speak, but during the stream, Digital Foundry published a feature revealing the system's specs. Its CPU features 8 Zen 2 cores, and its GPU--using custom RDNA 2 architecture--offers 10.28 TFLOPs of power. It comes with 16 GB of memory and an 825 GB SSD, and it allows for storage to be expanded with an NVMe SSD slot.
Cerny noted during his chat that TFLOPs alone aren't the ultimate measure of performance; you can't simply compare compute units or FLOPs from PS4 to those of PS5, for instance. While that TFLOPs figure is lower than that of the Xbox Series X, Digital Foundry states, "Sony's pitch is essentially this: a smaller GPU can be a more nimble, more agile GPU, the inference being that PS5's graphics core should be able to deliver performance higher than you may expect from a TFLOPs number that doesn't accurately encompass the capabilities of all parts of the GPU."
PlayStation 5 Specs
Component
CPU 8x Zen 2 Cores at 3.5GHz (variable frequency)
GPU 10.28 TFLOPs, 36 CUs at 2.23GHz (variable frequency)
GPU Architecture Custom RDNA 2
Memory/Interface 16GB GDDR6/256-bit
Memory Bandwidth 448GB/s
Internal Storage Custom 825GB SSD
IO Throughput 5.5GB/s (Raw), Typical 8-9GB/s (Compressed)
Expandable Storage NVMe SSD Slot
External Storage USB HDD Support
Optical Drive 4K UHD Blu-ray Drive
For comparison, the Xbox Series X will feature 12 teraflops of performance, built off AMD's new RDNA 2 architecture. The GPU will feature 16GB of GDDR6 memory across a variable memory bus--10GB will run at 560GB/s, while the remaining 6GB will run at a slower 330GB/s. The Series X will support two types of external memory, allowing you to expand SSD storage with a proprietary drive from Seagate or store games on an external HDD (in the same way as the Xbox One).
Cerny shared many new details on the PS5's system architecture, and he spoke about how Sony plans to push the future of games with this new hardware. One part of this is the PS5's new SSD, which speeds up loading times (see the Spider-Man comparison here) and offers a number of other benefits to developers.
The PS5's new system architecture will allow for faster rendering, which means more environmental objects and textures will populate at a faster rate. Like the Xbox Series X, the PS5 will also have ray tracing support to help developers make better-looking games.
The PS5 also has a new controller that features haptic feedback instead of the standard rumble technology used by many companies for years. As an example, crashing a car in a racing game will feel different than making a tackle in a football game. The new PS5 controller also has "adaptive triggers" that can be programmed by developers.
We also know the PS5 will have a disc drive for physical games and 4K Blu-rays, and that disc capacity will be 100 GB. The PS5 will also require players to install their games, but with the option to choose what part of a game to install.
The PlayStation 5 is due to launch this holiday, though a price point and official games launch lineup have not been announced yet. For its part, Microsoft is also releasing a next-gen console, the Xbox Series X, this holiday season with Halo Infinite as a launch title.[/quote]
https://www.gamespot.com/articles/ps5-specs-revealed-cpu-gpu-ssd-tflops-details-and-/1100-6474902/
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1 ReplyI’ve never really understood the whole console wars thing. Each console has its advantages that can allow it to sell more copies than the contender. At PS4 launch, they had more advantages over Xbox based on releases alone. Thus they outsold Xbox. I’m no expert, but it’s looking as if Xbox is going to be the more powerful console and have better releases imo. Idk, I just hate the constant mentality that one console [i]has to be better than the other and if you say otherwise your opinion is invalid.[/i]
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The only thing I was disappointed in was the amount of space the ssd has that and he didn’t either confirm nor deny ps-ps3 backwards capability
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36 RepliesUgh. Children and their console wars.
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Edited by michael: 3/22/2020 12:37:27 PMAs an exclusively PC gamer, these new console specs are impressive for the price. Just dont forget that they sell at that price because they charge for going on the internet and charge a ton for games. When buying a new gaming system you have to look at long term costs, not just the price of the system. I’ve paid for two consoles with the money I’ve spent throughout being on PC, but I’ve never spent more than 40 dollars on a game and I don’t put down 70 a year to go online. After a couple years a console player would have spent the same. Im not saying PC master race because I know that isn’t true and everyone has different things that work for them. I’m just saying don’t get caught up in the cheap price for mid-high end pc level specs and think you are getting a steal.
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29 RepliesThe new Xbox is more powerful lol
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12 RepliesMight have to get an Xbox this year unfortunately 😣😔. Sony acting stupid
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2 RepliesEdited by SpongyMallard7: 3/19/2020 2:33:56 PMSony and MS: “We finally have better rumble features in the controller. Nintendo: We’ve had better rumble since 2017. It’s also really lame how not even the 100 most played PS4 games will have backwards compatibility. Most of my PS4 games probably wouldn’t fall under that category. Hopefully we get PS1-PS3 support too. If only Sony tried doing it already with the PS4 like MS has been doing for the Xbox One, maybe they would be better equipped to handle it now. Also, I wish they would quit using Spider-Man as an example of loading times. The game doesn’t even really have long load times on a base PS4. They should have tried HZD, RDR2 or The Witcher 3. For the lulz it would be funny to see Anthem still take a minute or two. Fallout 4 or Skyrim would be better games to test as well.
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I like the expandable NVMe slot. NVMe SSD prices have dropped a lot over the past couple years.
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3 Replies[i]I’m not gonna lie, I’m slightly under-whelmed. The Backwards compatibility thing is huge disappointment ( top 100 PS4 games, at least for now ), so much for that pipe dream of being able to Xenogears, Suikoden 1 & 2, and Kingdoms of Amular Reckoning on my PS5. I didn’t help that the announcement happened right when I found out I’d lost my job ( temporarily laid off due the Corona Virus ), so it doesn’t look like I’ll be buying a Next Gen console this year, I might not even have a roof over my head by the time this thing comes out.[/i]
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2 RepliesThat’s great. When will it get released? [spoiler]HAIL HYDRA!!!!![/spoiler]
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1 ReplyI'm just waiting for more info about the PS5 and Microsoft exclusives coming out with both releases. I'm already getting Halo for PC once it comes out but it's just a wait for others.
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6 RepliesCool, it doesn’t have any great Xbox exclusives
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Laughs in PC
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13 RepliesCool. It doesn't have halo
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10 RepliesThe Xbox is gonna be better lol
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So what are your thoughts?