PlayStation fans have received great news this week as Sony suggests it could be impacted when it comes to the price of PS5 consoles. Looking at all the technological leaps that have been confirmed, suggested or rumored for the PS5 console, many believe the hardware could (or should) cost well over $ 4,000. However, Sony news this week suggests that Sony will assume the weight of this cost as a loss to put fans aside at the launch.
PlayStation PushSquare expert website suggests that Sony's top bosses, speaking to investors as part of a financial statement earlier this week, suggested that the company focus on “market penetration and market acceptability with its state-of-the-art hardware” . So what does this mean in principle?
PushSquare suggests that this could mean that the company wants to set a price that consumers accept as fair "so you can maximize the device installation base from the start." In short, they will make it accessible simply for you to get in the door. Exactly how 'affordable' it will be, though, is the big question that PlayStation fans will want to know.
In October, the Daily Star survey revealed that most PlayStation fans would pay more than PS4, PS4 Pro or even PS3 to buy the PS5. The results, based on more than 6000 votes, showed that only 29% of voters were unwilling to pay more than the launch price of the PS4, which arrived in Brazil costing about 4,000 reais. Notably, 71% of voters are willing to pay more than that for Sony's new machine.
Research from PushSquare and Eurogamer.com also suggested that PlayStation fans expected to see the next-generation console cost between £ 400 and £ 500. It is rumored that technology within the next PlayStation console supports 8K resolution, tracking technology. lightning and many other features that push the boundaries of what gamers think console hardware is capable of.
The only confirmed technological improvement we've seen so far comes from the video shot a few months ago by Takashi Mochizuki of the Wall Street Journal. For those who don't remember, the video (seen below) - filmed at a stage performance, probably intended only for Sony investors and business partners. He showed the console in action by playing a small section of the PS4 exclusive game Marvel's Spider-Man. What was really interesting is that the demo took 8.1 seconds to load on a PS4 Pro, but less than a second (0.083 seconds to be precise) to load on new console hardware.
October was also a big month for the console, as the first image of Sony's new PS5 console leaked, thanks to an image shared by the YouTube channel ZONEofTECH. The first unofficial look at the new PlayStation console looks pretty much identical to the Sony PS5 patents leaked earlier this year by Dutch tech site LetsGoDigital.
The shared image, seen above, is certainly not the final product, but a PS5 development kit sent to developers so they can start building games for the new console.
This was not the only PS5 leak in October, as we also saw potential leaks for the new PS5 Dualshock 5 controller, introducing some cool new features allowing the controller to connect to cloud gaming services.
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