Sony today unveiled the PlayStation 5 Pro and the updated console gets a sizeable graphics upgrade. But it’ll come at a $200 premium over the disc-based PS5. The PlayStation 5 Pro, which launches Nov.
TL;DR: Former PlayStation executive Shuhei Yoshida has argued in a YouTube interview that advancing graphics, specifically ray tracing, has reached a plateau, and the same is broadly true for higher ...
$700 for a slight performance increase while omitting both the disc drive AND the vertical stand is a rip-off. Sony's just trying to kill the physical disc because physical discs hurt profit from ...
Near the end of the presentation, Cerny revealed Sony has begun to collaborate with AMD to further improve its gaming tech. Codenamed Amethyst, this new project has two main goals. The first is to ...
It’s that time of the console generation again, when the big players start refreshing their hardware for graphics boosts of arguable importance. Right on time, Sony has unveiled the PlayStation 5 Pro, ...
PlayStation’s priorities may shift from chasing better graphics to crafting “immersive narratives” over the coming years. This statement comes from PlayStation’s head of production and Head of Product ...
Former PlayStation executive Shuhei Yoshida has been sharing quite a few insights on the games industry since his departure from Sony. Among them, he says it might be time for Sony to reconsider its ...
Today, the $700 PlayStation 5 Pro can already produce crisper, sharper, smoother, and more stable graphics than a PS5, if you sit close enough to appreciate them. But starting in 2026, the company ...
AMD and Sony jointly teased AMD's approach to improving its future graphics hardware performance in a video posted to YouTube this week: compression, aggregation and dedication. Compressing all the ...
Former Sony indie boss Shuhei Yoshida has suggested the former holder needs to move on from dazzling with flashy visuals and change its ‘way of thinking’ going forward. Speaking with AV Watch, Yoshida ...
But people are used to labor-intensive things like health and education getting more expensive while manufactured goods such as electronics get cheaper. It implies that in a world of rapid ...