The PlayStation 5 Review: The Power of Consistency
Photos courtesy of Sony
New game consoles rarely launch alone. Of the 11 home consoles released by Sony, Microsoft or Nintendo since 2001, only three didn’t come out the same year as another. In fact, all of the other eight were released the same week as a competitor, and always in a November. The GameCube and original Xbox landed within days of each other in 2001, and that continued with the Wii and PlayStation 3 in 2006, the Xbox One and PlayStation 4 in 2013, and now the Xbox Series X/S and the PlayStation 5 in 2020. The console wars are real, and totally perpetuated by the companies that make them. I reviewed the new Xbox yesterday, and now it’s time to talk about the PlayStation 5, which hits stores on November 12.
Sony’s latest box boasts the confidence you’d expect on the heels of the market-leading PlayStation 4. It doesn’t try to rethink what made the PS4 so successful, but expands on its strengths in a natural and iterative manner. Despite the system’s new design, simultaneously stark and flashy with its curved, clean, white side panels, the PlayStation 5 in action looks and feels a lot like the PlayStation 4 did, only with more power behind it. If you’ve ever played that last system, you’ll feel right at home when you jump into the new one.
But what about the numbers, I can hear you asking. Well, how do you feel about an 8-core AMD Zen 2 CPU that can run at up to 3.5 GHz? A GPU based on AMD’s fancy new RDNA 2, the same graphics card that the new Xbox is also built around, and that has all that ray tracing biz the specheads are gaga over? Uh… how do you feel about… uh… 16 GB of memory? Please tell me how you feel, so that I can know how to feel—again, I play games, I don’t study the tech that makes them possible. What I do know is that all of these numbers are higher than the numbers on the PlayStation 4, meaning that, yes, a brand new gaming console that costs $499 is considerably more powerful than the seven-year-old one it’s replacing.
Some numbers I do understand, slightly, are 4K and 8K. The PlayStation 5 runs at a native 4K resolution, with HDR support (of course), and can chug along at up to 120 frames per second. Don’t worry: it still works perfectly fine on older HD TVs that are capped to 1080 or even 720p. You’ll even still see the other benefits of the PS5’s powerful architecture in action, like its speed, if you don’t own a 4K TV. Sony’s also bragging about 8K resolution on the PS5, and although that is technically possible (not that I have an 8K TV to check it out, or anything), here’s a CNET article explaining why upscaling 4K games to 8K on a PlayStation 5 isn’t really that big of a deal.
I can confirm that a PlayStation 5 game played on a 4K TV with high dynamic range color looks pretty damn sharp. I used Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales for comparison’s sake, and yes, the enhanced lighting effects on the PlayStation 5 are noticeable, especially in the crispness of the reflections on glass buildings as Spider-Man swings through the city. Miles Morales on the PS5 is vibrant, fluid, and almost photorealistic, and a clear step up from the PS4 Pro.
I’m leading with the graphics and visuals not because those are the most important parts of a videogame, but because they’ve long been the standard by which new consoles are judged. What’s more significant to me is the user experience. And on that front the PlayStation 5 continues a trend in gaming of simplifying menus and layouts while also putting your entire library of games, stretching back to the previous generation, just a few clicks away.
After powering up your PlayStation 5 and seeing a brief intro screen, you’ll find a main layout that’s similar to the PlayStation 4’s, but a little cleaner and less cluttered. This screen has two main tabs on the top left, one for games and one for media. Depending on which one you’re on, you’ll see a single line of tiles showing either the games or entertainment apps that you’ve recently used. At the top right on either of those pages you’ll find icons that can quickly take you to a search bar, the settings menu, and your PSN profile. Compared to the busier Xbox Series X interface and its multitude of tabs, the PlayStation 5 is downright elegant.
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