Still though, Zen 2 “up to” 3.5GHz on the PS5 (non-Pro) vs Zen 4 “up to” 4.8GHz; RDNA 2 with 36 CUs at 2.23 GHz vs RDNA 3 with 28 CUs at 2.45GHz
Yeah the PS5 has more memory available to the GPU, but it’s shared and the Steam Machine has more total memory
Also, everyone seems to be forgetting the “semi custom” bit, which while it’s less than half the PS5 Pro’s CUs, I’d be willing to wager that it’ll beat the base PS5
I’m betting they price it under $500 for the 512GB version (complete guess here, don’t crucify me lol)
everyone seems to be forgetting the “semi custom” bit
They’ve already explained the customisation, which is that it’s missing 4 compute units compared to the consumer version. So taking it into account would mean that we’d compare it to a lower tier GPU than the current assumption.
but it’s shared and the Steam Machine has more total memory
I’d be willing to wager that it’ll beat the base PS5
The system having more total memory than the PS5 isn’t going to help. Games are designed with the PS5’s configuration in mind and make assumptions about the available memory. Video memory is also just a lot more useful than system memory. It’s a lot (~10x) faster, and all the things that take up space are things related to video. Even if it received native ports, it wouldn’t be able to run PS5 games as well as the PS5. The CPU does sound faster. It can probably run Cities Skylines faster than a base PS5.
I also think it’ll be under €500, but I don’t really except it to be better priced than a console. If I wanted to play Fifa, and I can get Fifa bundled with a PS5 for €450, then it would have to be €380 to match the value. And then I’d need to think about like, do I trust PlayStation? Of course, it’s the 5th PlayStation I’d be buying. Vs do I trust these people? Which version looks better? It’ll be the PlayStation version. Which version is more likely to just work with the fewest updates and faff? It’ll be the PlayStation version also.
ABetterTomorrow@sh.itjust.works asking for it to be $250 isn’t that far off what it would have to cost to sell the 300+ million lifetime units Julian Benson is alluding to.
Mondoshawan@lemmy.zip 20 hours ago
Thanks, I hadn’t seen that.
Still though, Zen 2 “up to” 3.5GHz on the PS5 (non-Pro) vs Zen 4 “up to” 4.8GHz; RDNA 2 with 36 CUs at 2.23 GHz vs RDNA 3 with 28 CUs at 2.45GHz
Yeah the PS5 has more memory available to the GPU, but it’s shared and the Steam Machine has more total memory
Also, everyone seems to be forgetting the “semi custom” bit, which while it’s less than half the PS5 Pro’s CUs, I’d be willing to wager that it’ll beat the base PS5
I’m betting they price it under $500 for the 512GB version (complete guess here, don’t crucify me lol)
Aria@lemmygrad.ml 18 hours ago
They’ve already explained the customisation, which is that it’s missing 4 compute units compared to the consumer version. So taking it into account would mean that we’d compare it to a lower tier GPU than the current assumption.
The system having more total memory than the PS5 isn’t going to help. Games are designed with the PS5’s configuration in mind and make assumptions about the available memory. Video memory is also just a lot more useful than system memory. It’s a lot (~10x) faster, and all the things that take up space are things related to video. Even if it received native ports, it wouldn’t be able to run PS5 games as well as the PS5. The CPU does sound faster. It can probably run Cities Skylines faster than a base PS5.
I also think it’ll be under €500, but I don’t really except it to be better priced than a console. If I wanted to play Fifa, and I can get Fifa bundled with a PS5 for €450, then it would have to be €380 to match the value. And then I’d need to think about like, do I trust PlayStation? Of course, it’s the 5th PlayStation I’d be buying. Vs do I trust these people? Which version looks better? It’ll be the PlayStation version. Which version is more likely to just work with the fewest updates and faff? It’ll be the PlayStation version also.
ABetterTomorrow@sh.itjust.works asking for it to be $250 isn’t that far off what it would have to cost to sell the 300+ million lifetime units Julian Benson is alluding to.