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This is the discussion thread for a recent post on GTPlanet:
This article was published by Michael Leary (@Terronium-12) on May 15th, 2018 in the Gaming category.
More to the point, PlayStation head Shawn Layden squashed the rumors. On the PlayStation Blogcast he states (beginning at 10:44) “there will be no new hardware announcements at E3 this year.” It doesn’t get any better than confirmation from the man himself. Instead, Sony will focus on its catalog of games from a variety of developers at this year’s event.
Pretty soon ya'll console gamers will see that it's about time to come to the dark side. [evil laugh commences]
late 2020My guess is somewhere between 2020 and 2022
checkerboard and upscale, maybe few titles with meh visuals. Native 4K isnt for mainstream consoles, its premium resolution.deal with 4K
Opposite over on this end of the world, gaming consoles, not only would they be awfully expensive by themselves, but the games are at double price compared to PC games and that's along with the silly concept of paying for online.Well, PC gaming is prohibitively expensive over here, so I'm not joining the "dark side" anytime soon...
checkerboard and upscale, maybe few titles with meh visuals. Native 4K isnt for mainstream consoles, its premium resolution.
Pretty soon ya'll console gamers will see that it's about time to come to the dark side. [evil laugh commences]
Unfortunately mining has ruined the viability of PC gaming at a reasonable cost so probably not.
A single console's full lifespan certainly, but not the lifecycle of the generation as a whole; that's around 6 - 6.5 years. Look at the PS2 for example. Though replaced by the PS3 in the summer of 2006, the final high-profile releases came out in late 2008 (NFS: Undercover, Quantum of Solace, Mercs 2, MotoGP '08) and thereafter all you got was the yearly reskinned sports titles with engines dating back to the Millennium.I don't understand why some people are expecting the PS5 to come out so soon, and get disappointed that it's not coming out soon. It's only been like 4 1/2 years since the PS4 launched. The usual console life cycle is around 8 years. Plus, IMO the PS4 is at its prime right now; releasing a new console would just be detrimental to business.
I'd dive into a PS4 Pro if a price reduction happened. Can't really justify it right now given all I really play on the console is Rocket League and GT Sport.Welp, that statement has also outruled the possibility of a revised PS4 Pro then.
Price drop maybe?
The minute I am able to move out into my own place, I'm selling my Xbox One and going straight PC, with a PS4 to play Yakuza/Persona/MLB The Show and any other PS exclusive. There's simply no point to having an Xbox now that the only series I really care for, Forza, can be easily had on PC.
A single console's full lifespan certainly, but not the lifecycle of the generation as a whole; that's around 6 - 6.5 years. Look at the PS2 for example. Though replaced by the PS3 in the summer of 2006, the final high-profile releases came out in late 2008 (NFS: Undercover, Quantum of Solace, Mercs 2, MotoGP '08) and thereafter all you got was the yearly reskinned sports titles with engines dating back to the Millennium.
By that logic, we should expect a PS5 no earlier than winter 2019 and some decent AAA titles through to 2021. I already predicted that GT Sport's servers would be shut down in January 2022 given how long GT6's remained for, so unless FIA pull the plug or something we still got a good 4 years to go.
No it won't lol.For me, PS5 in 2020. It will be 8K.
When Tokyo won the right to host the Olympics in 2020 they agreed with all the electronic manufacturers (including Sony) that the whole thing would be shown in full 8K.No it won't lol.
I bet many of the games will still use checkerboard rendering to reach 4k even.
2020 with GTA VI as launch title