THE BIGGEST ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF PLAYSTATION 5 AFTER TWO MONTHS OF USING THE SONY CONSOLE
: 30 sty 2022, 19:42
The PlayStation 5 is the most frequently launched gaming platform I've spent more than two months with. Now is a good time to write about the experiences we've gathered and summarize what Sony has done well compared to the Xbox Series X and what needs to be improved.
Two months into the PlayStation 5 and I decided to capture the biggest advantages and biggest disadvantages of the new console. Thus, I want to help those who are still hesitant to buy a new gaming platform and don't know which console to choose. This article was made with help of specialists of entropia.pro, where you can find the best overwatch aimbot, so I hope that my more than two months of experience will help better illuminate the PS5's greatest strengths and weaknesses.
Biggest Advantage #1: The DualSense controller really changes everything
One of the biggest advantages of Sony's new console is its controller. DualSense is a giant step forward. Not only on top of the DualShock 4, but also on top of its competitors' pads. Adaptive triggers change everything. Their fingertip resistance reflects the feel of firing a gun or pressing the gas, which previously seemed impossible. Sony has done a tremendous job of making a real breakthrough.
The biggest flaw #1: The inability to expand the game's capabilities.
The PlayStation 5 uses extremely fast and extremely expensive SSD storage, giving the user only 667 GB of data space. That's the capacity I used a few weeks after the console premiered. Since then, I've been forced to constantly make decisions: which game to delete to make room for the next one.
At this point, expanding the capacity of the PlayStation 5 with a second SSD is not possible. It's a shame, because fast enough memories in the right form are already available on the market. However, Sony is taking its time with the necessary system upgrade. According to my information, PlayStation 5 owners won't be able to expand the console's internal memory until around 2021. That's too long. Especially since Xbox series owners can use dedicated SSDs from the premiere.
Biggest advantage No. 2: Game at 120 frames per second
You might think you're buying a new console for new games. However, when I look at my activity logs, they show that I spent most of my time playing games from the last generation that received updates that took advantage of the PlayStation 5's extra features. These updates have given dusty games a second youth, becoming better than ever before.
I'm thinking primarily of Destiny 2 and Rainbow Six Siege. Both games run in PvP mode at 120 frames per second, which is used by my Bravia XH90 with a 120 Hz panel. The PlayStation 5 finally offers a competitive networking module with the quality known from personal computers, at least in a narrow portion of games. It's a standard that's very easy to get used to, and very hard to give up afterwards.
Biggest flaw #3: Sluggish game catalog and rolling releases
To begin with, Sony introduced two great games to its console, Amazing Spider-Man Miles Morales and Demon's Souls. Unfortunately, two months later, there's nothing of a similar caliber or level of appeal on the horizon. The new Ratchet and Clank, Gran Turismo 7 or the new Horizon are games without specific release dates. Destruction AllStars, added to PS Plus, is average at best, while the intriguing Returnal has been pushed back to late April.
I have no doubt that Sony will eventually fill its new platform with awesome exclusive games. It will be exactly like the PlayStation 4 or even better. However, looking through the PS Store resources two months after the PS5 launch, I see a very limited catalog of brand new games. If not for the previously mentioned, updated multiplatform games, I would only have to play Watch Dogs Legion and Assassin 'Creed Valhalla.
Biggest Benefit #4: Load Time?
PC gamers may be angry that SSDs have been the norm for them for almost a decade. True and untrue. On the one hand, the use of SSDs has actually made loading PC games much faster than on consoles with archaic HDDs. On the other hand, the relentless support for HDDs on PCs was like a bullet in the way of developers making something really big and really new. Only now, after breaking the link between consoles and HDDs, can we harness the real potential of SSD memory.
That real potential lies not so much in the faster loading times known on computers, but in the practical elimination of them. The way Demon's Souls and Miles Morales content loads is an absolute revolution. Something completely new that can't be seen on PC. And it makes a very good impression.
Biggest flaw #5: Tempest Audio 3D is not a revolution
Sony has spent a lot of time telling the media about an innovative use of digital surround sound. On paper, Tempeast Audio 3D is brilliant technology. Thanks to a special layout in the console, ordinary stereo sound in regular L/R headphones is turned into multi-channel digital surround sound, similar to DTS: X2 or Dolby Digital. In practice, it is much worse.
I've tested numerous headsets paired with the PlayStation 5, and no stereo solution supported by Audio 3D can match the dedicated DTS for the console. In addition, Tempest sometimes causes problems. Such as in Call of Duty Warzone, where many wireless headsets go crazy when 3D Audio support is enabled and needs to be disabled in the system settings.
Biggest advantage #6: Backwards compatibility and external devices
The fact that I can plug my external hard drive into the PlayStation 5 with my entire collection of PlayStation 4 games without first formatting or loading is great. Just switch the environment from PS4 to PS5 and you're all set. A regularly updated collection stays with us for the next decade. In addition, backward-compatible games work better than on PS4 because the PS4 Pro is chosen as the starter model.
At this point, it is worth emphasizing that the PlayStation 5 is not only backward compatible with PS4 games, but also with PS4 accessories. If you have a steering wheel, wireless headset, arcade joystick or space joystick, chances are good that they will work on the new PlayStation 5 as well.
The biggest drawback #7: advanced picture and sound formats
The PlayStation 5 has an HDMI 2.1 connector. This means that the console can output a 4K signal at 120 frames per second or an 8K signal. Unfortunately, Sony didn't follow through with the punch and didn't implement Dolby Atmos or Dolby Vision formats on its new console. And that's a shame, because it's clear to see that both standards are gaining a reputation as market leaders.
Because of the lack of support for Dolby Atmos and Dolby Vision, I have to use Netflix on my Android TV instead of my Sony console. After all, why choose the worst solution when I have a Dolby-compatible TV and sound bar. I won't experience Dolby Atmosa in video games, although the Xbox Series does. What's interesting, Dolby Vision works on the PS5, but only when playing video from Blu-ray media.
Two months into the PlayStation 5 and I decided to capture the biggest advantages and biggest disadvantages of the new console. Thus, I want to help those who are still hesitant to buy a new gaming platform and don't know which console to choose. This article was made with help of specialists of entropia.pro, where you can find the best overwatch aimbot, so I hope that my more than two months of experience will help better illuminate the PS5's greatest strengths and weaknesses.
Biggest Advantage #1: The DualSense controller really changes everything
One of the biggest advantages of Sony's new console is its controller. DualSense is a giant step forward. Not only on top of the DualShock 4, but also on top of its competitors' pads. Adaptive triggers change everything. Their fingertip resistance reflects the feel of firing a gun or pressing the gas, which previously seemed impossible. Sony has done a tremendous job of making a real breakthrough.
The biggest flaw #1: The inability to expand the game's capabilities.
The PlayStation 5 uses extremely fast and extremely expensive SSD storage, giving the user only 667 GB of data space. That's the capacity I used a few weeks after the console premiered. Since then, I've been forced to constantly make decisions: which game to delete to make room for the next one.
At this point, expanding the capacity of the PlayStation 5 with a second SSD is not possible. It's a shame, because fast enough memories in the right form are already available on the market. However, Sony is taking its time with the necessary system upgrade. According to my information, PlayStation 5 owners won't be able to expand the console's internal memory until around 2021. That's too long. Especially since Xbox series owners can use dedicated SSDs from the premiere.
Biggest advantage No. 2: Game at 120 frames per second
You might think you're buying a new console for new games. However, when I look at my activity logs, they show that I spent most of my time playing games from the last generation that received updates that took advantage of the PlayStation 5's extra features. These updates have given dusty games a second youth, becoming better than ever before.
I'm thinking primarily of Destiny 2 and Rainbow Six Siege. Both games run in PvP mode at 120 frames per second, which is used by my Bravia XH90 with a 120 Hz panel. The PlayStation 5 finally offers a competitive networking module with the quality known from personal computers, at least in a narrow portion of games. It's a standard that's very easy to get used to, and very hard to give up afterwards.
Biggest flaw #3: Sluggish game catalog and rolling releases
To begin with, Sony introduced two great games to its console, Amazing Spider-Man Miles Morales and Demon's Souls. Unfortunately, two months later, there's nothing of a similar caliber or level of appeal on the horizon. The new Ratchet and Clank, Gran Turismo 7 or the new Horizon are games without specific release dates. Destruction AllStars, added to PS Plus, is average at best, while the intriguing Returnal has been pushed back to late April.
I have no doubt that Sony will eventually fill its new platform with awesome exclusive games. It will be exactly like the PlayStation 4 or even better. However, looking through the PS Store resources two months after the PS5 launch, I see a very limited catalog of brand new games. If not for the previously mentioned, updated multiplatform games, I would only have to play Watch Dogs Legion and Assassin 'Creed Valhalla.
Biggest Benefit #4: Load Time?
PC gamers may be angry that SSDs have been the norm for them for almost a decade. True and untrue. On the one hand, the use of SSDs has actually made loading PC games much faster than on consoles with archaic HDDs. On the other hand, the relentless support for HDDs on PCs was like a bullet in the way of developers making something really big and really new. Only now, after breaking the link between consoles and HDDs, can we harness the real potential of SSD memory.
That real potential lies not so much in the faster loading times known on computers, but in the practical elimination of them. The way Demon's Souls and Miles Morales content loads is an absolute revolution. Something completely new that can't be seen on PC. And it makes a very good impression.
Biggest flaw #5: Tempest Audio 3D is not a revolution
Sony has spent a lot of time telling the media about an innovative use of digital surround sound. On paper, Tempeast Audio 3D is brilliant technology. Thanks to a special layout in the console, ordinary stereo sound in regular L/R headphones is turned into multi-channel digital surround sound, similar to DTS: X2 or Dolby Digital. In practice, it is much worse.
I've tested numerous headsets paired with the PlayStation 5, and no stereo solution supported by Audio 3D can match the dedicated DTS for the console. In addition, Tempest sometimes causes problems. Such as in Call of Duty Warzone, where many wireless headsets go crazy when 3D Audio support is enabled and needs to be disabled in the system settings.
Biggest advantage #6: Backwards compatibility and external devices
The fact that I can plug my external hard drive into the PlayStation 5 with my entire collection of PlayStation 4 games without first formatting or loading is great. Just switch the environment from PS4 to PS5 and you're all set. A regularly updated collection stays with us for the next decade. In addition, backward-compatible games work better than on PS4 because the PS4 Pro is chosen as the starter model.
At this point, it is worth emphasizing that the PlayStation 5 is not only backward compatible with PS4 games, but also with PS4 accessories. If you have a steering wheel, wireless headset, arcade joystick or space joystick, chances are good that they will work on the new PlayStation 5 as well.
The biggest drawback #7: advanced picture and sound formats
The PlayStation 5 has an HDMI 2.1 connector. This means that the console can output a 4K signal at 120 frames per second or an 8K signal. Unfortunately, Sony didn't follow through with the punch and didn't implement Dolby Atmos or Dolby Vision formats on its new console. And that's a shame, because it's clear to see that both standards are gaining a reputation as market leaders.
Because of the lack of support for Dolby Atmos and Dolby Vision, I have to use Netflix on my Android TV instead of my Sony console. After all, why choose the worst solution when I have a Dolby-compatible TV and sound bar. I won't experience Dolby Atmosa in video games, although the Xbox Series does. What's interesting, Dolby Vision works on the PS5, but only when playing video from Blu-ray media.