I can't believe that anyone still plays this tripe. I used to play this on the PS3, just for the novelty of owning a Bungie game on a Sony console, but with all of the mistakes they made, you'd be forgiven for thinking that the developers don't know what the heck they're doing.
The biggest takeaway, is that this is one big sucker. That heatsink is something that you would see on an AIB graphics card.
This kind of gaming brings back the memories. I would actually consider something like this, just for the quick fun of these types of games. I would choose the gold/woodgrain version of the console.
No, it will fluctuate.
The Series S is for people who don't own a 4K TV, and who wouldn't benefit from owning a high powered 4K console like the Series X. If you already own a 4K TV, then it is less likely that you would buy the Series S, since it is not a 4K console. Also, people who have the money to buy a 4K TV, probably also have the money to spend the extra $200.00 on the Series X. It is important to understand the socioeconomics of the situation to make a proper analysis.
Yes, but most developers wont bother having games run at 1440p natively, since most people wont see the benefit, unless they happen to own a 1440p PC monitor. A 1440p native resolution will lower performance for people playing on 1080p TVs (which will be the vast majority), with really nothing to be gained by it. Expect most games to run at 1080p 60fps on the Series S.
If you have a 1080p TV, then this is what the Series S is meant for, and since 1080p TVs are, well.....1080p, the Series S is going to be doing the job that it is generally meant for. The Series S isn't going to hold back anything. It's going to play the same games at a lower resolution, and possibly, at a lower level of detail in order to keep framerates higher.
It's painful seeing a whole bunch of people who don't understand anything in regards to how res...
"up to" 60 fps.
Get help.
So?
That's why Sony is coming out with an All Digital console, because if Microsoft gets their way.......
Dude....
.....on consoles.
The Series X and PS5 are no different, because they basically are high end or upper mid-range PCs. Yes, heat is bad, but it exists, especially in small form factor PCs as you said, so this is nothing out of the ordinary. They've done the testing, and now they're manufacturing millions of units.
@ IRetrouk
When they test the heat tolerances for CPUs and GPUs inside of PC cases, they do use thermometers to see how hot the components get inside of a PC using a thermometer. Thats how computer hardware and prebuilt PCs are designed. They don't just put their hand on the side of the case and anecdotally say that it's too hot. Go watch Gamers Nexus on youtube, and you'll learn a lot about PC cooling and thermals.
Throw an RTX 2080TI in with a high end CPU, overclocked memory and a PSU into a Mini ITX computer case, and I'm sure the results would be the same. As long as the Series X dissipates the heat fast enough, it will work just fine.
They've been testing this system for many months now, so I'm sure the Engineers understand the heat threshold. You don't get high end PC graphics, A.I. and physics without a lot of heat, and that's just a fact of life with compu...
Not too smart!
That's almost half of the PS5's available storage. This is totally unacceptable.
ATX cases are....really big!