The idea that Sony is already going to launch a mid-cycle “Pro” refresh of the PS5 seems like madness. Do they really want to further divide their customer base?<p>There are so few exclusive games to play on a PS5 it’s hardly worth it. I say this as somebody that owns “everything.” My Xbox and PS5 collect dust most of the year.<p>Likely going to stop buying consoles after doing so for 30 years. The PC and portable space is far more interesting and has better priced software.
PS4 is my last console. I’ve had many of them since the Sega Megadrive (Genesis). Sony injecting adverts into my home screen was the writing on the wall, as well as transcribing voice chat. I’ve been gaming on Linux for 2 years now and couldn’t be happier.
I think we're going to see a console cycle slowdown. It just takes too long to make a AAA game thst pushes the the PS5 to its limits. Who's going to buy a PS6 if they've only played a handful of PS5 games?
With Sony and Microsoft’s current strategy there is no good reason to buy either an Xbox or PlayStation if you have a decent PC. In the past I was compelled to buy an Xbox, PlayStation, and Nintendo console and maintain a decent gaming PC if I wanted to play all of the latest games. I can’t justify doing so anymore. Every game I want to play that is not published by Nintendo will come to PC either at launch or within a year.<p>I think sooner or later Sony pivots to PlayStation as a service / App. Despite their struggles, I think Xbox is eventually right. Both will go to a service model. You can buy their box or you can buy games through their app on PC or you can stream the game with their cloud services on lower power devices they don’t care. You will subscribe or buy games through their apps. The box will exist as a vestigial and for those who want a simple set top box.
I would have bought a PS5 on release, I had the money and was ready to buy, but I wasn’t able to while I watched scalpers get dozens of consoles. By the time I would have been able to buy one, over a year later, I had lost interest. My hype had died down and I didn’t see enough games released for it that I wanted to play. I’ve since bought a steam deck and couldn’t be happier. I’d consider buying a PS5 Pro if I can get one on release, but at this stage I’d be much more interested in a steam deck 2.<p>I play 90% of my games on steam deck, and a few games like crusader kings 3 in my laptop (also on Linux). Thanks to valve, Linux gaming works great!<p>Also, I’m put off the higher price tag of PS5 games.
I love my PS5.<p>I can game, not do ANY sysadmin, play most* backwards compatible games, and generally treat it like furniture Rather than a delicate hardware Device.<p>* - Sony psvr 1 games cannot be played on a PSVR2, And developers are required to patch them, or simply abandon them. No automatic adaptation is available. Psvr1 is a hassle to use compared to psvr 2. It's a disappointing choice.
I’m still going through the ps4 library. The ps5 is nice but its library is small and I can’t justify the price at the moment. I might pick one up used but it’s not like they’re coming out with great games.
Yet there is no point to buy a second hand one because of the PS5 backwards compatibility. You can
play the PS4 games and they run better and ofc all the new games as well.
It would be interesting to see the distribution across different countries.<p>My guess is that Europe and US have a lot more PS5s and peripheral economies have a larger PS4 base.