Literally barely any games that can’t be played on ps4 or Xbox one.

This ps5 almost feels like a waste of 500 bucks

  • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    My theory is that there was no reason to make a new generation of consoles, we have reached diminishing returns. People only need their games to look good enough and be big enough and run fast enough, the new generation just doesn’t matter anymore.

    Then again my primary form of gaming is ascii graphics so…

    • SorosFootSoldier [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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      5 months ago

      That’s why we need to make video games that are NOT woke. With huge boobs. Big hair. Big asses and bigger attitudes. To finally show that cute barista with the blue hair that I am a MAN and I will NEVER back down.

      • SuperZutsuki [they/them]@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        SSD, VRR, and HDR as standard in all consoles was really the upgrade for this generation. Now if Microsoft would just get on board with gyro we could finally make some progress in the controls space.

      • Leper_Messiah [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        Yeah the only thing that really impressed me about my ps5 was the load times truly are impressive for someone who never had a gaming pc with an ssd before

        Well, that and Horizon: FW did look real pretty

    • ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      People don’t even need games to look good enough, the biggest breakout hit of the year is just a mismatched Unreal stock asset forest that runs like ass, but what matters is they put Pokemon in it so 15 million sales.

    • dumpster_dove [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      5 months ago

      It doesn’t really make sense to force out a new generation of consoles for sales either, considering they’re often sold at a loss. I guess for player retention?

      • SuperZutsuki [they/them]@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        I never owned a console from the PS4/Xbone generation because they sucked so much. I ended up getting a PS5 and even if most of the games I play are also on PS4, they run better with much faster load times.

        • dumpster_dove [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          5 months ago

          Not always, but quite often

          Found this with a quick search (pcmag)

          Typically, when a new games console launches its price point is below the actual cost of manufacturing. But over time, through a combination of bulk component orders and the refining of the hardware design, the cost falls below the retail price. The PS3 was sold at a loss for nearly four years, the PS4 was profitable within six months of its launch, and the PS5 has taken eight months. Considering the novel new design and global chip shortages, that’s quite impressive.

          Microsoft doesn’t share Xbox hardware sales figures and has recently stated no Xbox console has ever turned a profit for the company

    • ashinadash [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      5 months ago

      Actually I gotta say this is very untrue. You coulda kept making games for the PS4, but not only does it have 7GB of memory to share, but its CPU cores are Jaguar architecture, made for netbooks in 2013. They are literally worse than AMD’s own poor-performance FX CPUs from 2011, which is why stuff like System Shock remake runs 30fps on PS4/XBO but can hit 60 on a fourteen year old PC.

      So while I agree largely about diminishing returns and that the new consoles are hopped up BS, (and their hardware is now even inadequate for many badly optimised games) the PS4 and XBO were not very good hardware c: The PS3 and 360 were similarly poor.

      There is I think no reason to ever replace the PS5 or Series X; they have RDNA2 graphics, eight-core Ryzen 2 CPUs, 16GB of memory and extremely fast NVME storage. Unlike previous generations they are balanced and well-rounded.

    • HumanBehaviorByBjork [any, undecided]@hexbear.net
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      5 months ago

      the PS2 was famously long lived, with new games coming out for it years after the PS3’s release. I think if Sony really wanted to force people to upgrade they could just do so by fiat, but historically they just haven’t wanted to, preferring to release the next gen as a high-end upgrade at first, and only later releasing a variant that’s within most peoples’ budgets.

    • Mousy [they/them, love/loves]@hexbear.net
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      5 months ago

      My theory is that there was no reason to make a new generation of consoles

      This is how microsoft and to a certain extent sony see it. With proprietary hardware more so being a thing of the past and the future being game pass or total bazinga shit like cloud streaming.

  • on the 360 playing battlefield bad company i assumed terrain destruction and stuff would be the norm in the future and maps would be a lot bigger with more people, i was too stupid to realize that the most important part of gaming is that the graphics get un-noticeably, incrementally better over time without any fundamental changes to gameplay or possible art styles, everything must be bland and ‘photorealistic’ or else it must be Fortnite. I used to assume a good game would get a sequel in a year or two and have significance game improvements, now i wait a decade or more to get the exact same game but with higher resolution and frame rate and new microtransactions

    • HumanBehaviorByBjork [any, undecided]@hexbear.net
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      5 months ago

      this is conjecture, but i think the growth of the “indie” tier of games has bifurcated the market and made AAA titles larger and more conservative. makes no sense to pour hundreds of millions of dollars into a game concept that’s even slightly different from something with proven mass-market appeal when a studio that’s a hundredth the size with a thousandth of the budget might make something way weirder and still hit a tenth of your sales goal. it’s just not maximizing your return.

      • WhatDoYouMeanPodcast [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        The AAA style: open world, someone calling you to tell you to meet them at story quest marker. You can quick teleport right next to the marker. A bunch of markers for side quests. Crafting consumables and sometimes rare armor that needs 10 side quest tokens. The story quest is a gauntlet of killing a bunch of dudes before fighting a boss. Cutscene. New ability. Beat the game. Some kind of movement ability unlocked.

    • ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      One of the reasons that died is that last gen went from the tech designed to be the most powerful thing available (on PS360) to CPUs that were bad even for 2013 mid-range laptops. Current gen is better but not that much better. Even on high end PCs GPU advancements are quickly outpacing CPUs.

      Another reason is that open world has replaced linear as the norm, it’s hard to do this shit when it has to be completely dynamic.

  • SuperZutsuki [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    Cost of development is way too high, recession means companies are laying people off and closing whole dev studios, COVID fucked up development timelines for a few years. High interest rates mean no more experimental mid-budget games, only cheap indies and massive bloated AAAA games

      • itappearsthat@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        The US federal funds rate. Basically the interest rate at which big banks can borrow money from the federal reserve. When the interest rate is low you can think of this as meaning money is cheap; there is a lot of it sloshing around to various less-profitable ventures (and, often, scams) because there are only so many ventures to go around and all the good ones are fully funded. This means companies hire more and are more experimental in their aims. When the interest rate is high, like it is now (relatively speaking), companies cannot get money as easily and so tend to clamp down their spending and direct it toward low risk things they are fairly sure will pay them back.

  • daniyeg@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    This ps5 almost feels like a waste of 500 bucks

    that’s cause it is

  • Gorb [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    Its the first time really that the consoles haven’t actually differed that much and been backwards compatible.

    Like yeah the ps2 could play ps1 games but the jump in graphics was so massive that no developer was making cross platform games. Ps3 was another generational leap but also changed hardware a lot making backwards compat not really a thing and same for ps4.

    Now ps4 and 5 are basically the same console developers stand very little to lose releasing their game on both platforms. Making an exclusive for the newer console which sold pretty poorly on both sides with still massive previous gen active user bases you’d basically be shooting yourself in the foot making a current gen only game.

    As a business I’d want my game to cover as many platforms as possible so the ps4 or switch is gonna be the base target depending on what I would be making.

  • magi [null/void]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    AAAA gaming ->

    Slow development times, Lack of innovation,Third person open world game thats 80 hours of bloat has become the standard.

    They are almost reskins of the same gameplay loops

    12th game in the same series with the next one coming next year…

    Sequels are a mistake, I want fresh experiences.

    Safe, safe, safe, chase the mainstream whales.

    DLC, 3 Season Passes…

    A console plus another controller plus paying for online gaming and a handful of games is the same cost as a decent pc hahaha

  • ashinadash [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    barely any games that can’t be played on ps4 or Xbox one

    One unique intersection here is this:

    Dev (say a studio under Square Enix) wants to make game for PS5, dev also does not want to leave 150 million potential buyers ob Nintendo Switch on the table. If dev is already building their game with the Switch in mind, might as well make a PS4 (~100 million consoles sold, probably still many active users) version as well. Hence why so many games have a platform spread that’s like “PC, PS5, PS4, Switch”.

    Exclusives, or even just leaving out lastgen consoles, has never made financial sense but now there’s less incentive than ever. See Microsoft had to deliberately cut off its devs from making Xbox One games.

      • ashinadash [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        To be real I expected the 8th gen to be long dead by now, but stuff continues to drop on old platforms. I think the Switch 2 will still be low-performance enough that PS4 ports will be viable.

      • itappearsthat@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        The steam deck specs & form factor is honestly peak. I don’t think anything will top it within the next decade, unless VR really takes off

      • ashinadash [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        If the Series S had 16GB of ram as well it would have been a fine step-down console, but its bizzare 8+2gb configuration is really bad :> death to Microsoft lol

  • Babs [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    PS5 got rid of themes. That one jazzy song from persona 5 used to be the Theme to Babs’s Bf’s Apartment, but now the best we can get is a spacey wooommmeoooom.

  • TheBroodian [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    To add to @queermunist@lemmy.ml’s comment, the most difficult and costly aspect of video games are the games themselves, which means that there’s also an inverse relationship with companies having interest in making them. Perhaps to investors, hardware has appeared like a sure investment, because they’ve always ignored how important the games are to the hardware.

  • JohnBrownsBussy2 [she/her, they/them]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    Since console hardware is converging towards PCs (as opposed to specialized hardware stratified by make), as well as the expansion of the PC market (which has a massive range of hardware of varying price points and capabilities) the benefits of making a game against the limits of a specific console is less and less of a good idea versus targeting a wide market. If you aren’t stuck to exclusivity for a single console, then it makes sense to target previous generation consoles if possible in order to maximize the size of the potential market.

  • Vingst [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    Ps5 controllers are dogshit too, just a matter of time for the sticks to stop working.

    I think capitalist consolidation of resources and safe-profit-focussed decisionmakers plays a part. We need more mid-budget games, risk-taking and sleeper hits.

  • mushroom [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    new consoles push the technological limits -> game dev costs more money and takes longer -> fewer games coming out -> fewer people bothering with buying new consoles when there are so few games -> less money to keep up with ballooning costs of game dev -> layoffs in the industry -> games take even longer to come out

    haven’t actually looked into the sales numbers to see if any of this is actually correct but it’s how it feels vibe wise

  • KnilAdlez [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    Well you’re first issue is expecting games on a playstation, something that hasn’t happened since the PS2. Xbox, I’m not sure what their deal is. I feel like they are wanting to get out of the console game and focus on pushing games for windows. Nintendo is the only gaming company that remembers that you need novelty to push hardware and keep games on your console.

    Though I think another issue is that there’s no reason to make games on consoles any more. Everyone has a smartphone and at least a laptop. ‘Gamers’ all have PCs with dedicated GPUs. Consoles have expensive development hardware and licensing fees. I feel like the Xbox One’s focus on an entertainment center device is the correct way to go if consoles want to continue existing into the future.

      • Tunnelvision [they/them]@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        The cost of entry for PC gaming is lower than consoles in my opinion. Between buying older games, older parts, and paying for online play, I’ve definitely saved money compared to buying multiple consoles.

          • magi [null/void]@hexbear.net
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            5 months ago

            A ps5 here is $650, another controller, plus online and a handful of games to play with my wife would easily bring it up to where a pc is the better option

          • MaoTheLawn [any, any]@hexbear.net
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            5 months ago

            True, but over time it just about pays off. I made the switch years and years ago. A PS5 probably outperforms my PC on new games on Ultra settings, but I can still play all of them just with the graphics turned a notch down. When I want to upgrade I can just switch the GPU out for a better one. Annoyingly though, GPUs have become very expensive.

            Anyway, I get mods, a PC for video editing and such, general work stuff, movies, an infinite amount of customisability of hard/software, and so on. I’ve got a ridiculous amount of value for money out of it. And I could push it further still hypothetically if I used it as a host. My partner could probably do everything they do on their laptop (watching stuff, working), through a second monitor, while I played the latest PS5 game on ‘High’ settings on the primary monitor.

            I loved my consoles when I had them, but I don’t think I’ll ever go back.

      • KnilAdlez [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        5 months ago

        Nah let people game on what they want to game on.

        I wasn’t stopping you, just telling you what I see in the gaming industry rn.

        I like consoles because the cost of entry is lower.

        That’s fine I’m not judging you for it, but the console is being beaten by other devices, especially smartphones. Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo need to adapt.