Yesterday, Sony gave gaming fans stuck at home something to nerd out over when PS5's lead system architect Mark Cerny appeared in a near hour-long stream that offered "a deep dive into PS5’s system architecture and how it will shape the future of games." Naturally, during that time, Cerny detailed many of the upgrades and system tweaks you can expect with the next generation of Playstation consoles (and you can read Dave's handy breakdown of all those details right here). But there was also a curious nugget buried in there -- at launch, PS5 will only play …
Microsoft's Xbox Series X is launching later this year. Here's everything we know about its name, release date, specs, and backward compatibility.
There is a new rumor from HipHopGamer that Sony is actually working on backwards compatibility for its PlayStation 5 console which releases next year.
Sony has confirmed that it is currently working to make the PlayStation 5 backward compatible, but fans are concerned by the statement.
Every seven years, Sony releases a new PlayStation console. In 2006, they released the PlayStation 3. In 2013, they released the PlayStation 4. And in 2020, they will release the (unofficially named) PlayStation 5. Wired has the first details on the upcoming console, and, unsurprisingly, it will be a bit of a powerhouse: PlayStation’s next-generation console ticks all those boxes, starting with an AMD chip at the heart of the device. (Warning: some alphabet soup follows.) The CPU is based on the third generation of AMD’s Ryzen line and contains eight cores of the company’s new …