PS4 vs Xbox One: which is better?


Introduction and design

Our incredibly in-depth Xbox One vs PS4 comparison is more meaningful than ever with the battle continuing to rage intensely in 2016. Our guide considers Microsoft’s backward compatibility news and previous price drops, and how it all contrasts with Sony’s powerful specs, exclusive games and graphics power.

Now almost two years since the consoles launched, Sony’s sales numbers prove that PS4 is more popular with early adopters of the next-generation of video games. Fact.

PlayStation 4 is outselling Xbox One 2-to-1 right now, surpassing 40.43 million systems sold worldwide, while Microsoft’s sales numbers are at 20.99 million. Back in January AMD hinted at price drops coming to both consoles, so it’s looking as though the PS4’s sales dominance is looking set to continue for the foreseeable future.

Who cares? Those are overall sales statistics – all meaningless, as multiple Xbox One price drops and surge in popularity are starting to make the debate a little more even. Better still, last November Microsoft began bringing Xbox 360 backwards compatibility to the Xbox One.

This is a lot more substantial than Sony’s existing backwards compatibility solution for the PS4, which is based around allowing users to stream games from Playstation Now. It’s a neat solution, but it can’t compare to playing a game locally on your console.

Searching for cheapest PS4 prices…

Microsoft’s come-from-behind campaign consists of adding exclusive games like Halo 5, full DVR capabilities, readying an Xbox Elite controller, gamepad remapping and, further out, experimenting with HoloLens.

In addition to Xbox One backward compatibility, Microsoft also enabled game streaming to Windows 10 presents exciting game streaming possibilities in its November update which came out last year. We’ve got a full guide on how to stream your Xbox One games to PC.

It’s also the only console with EA Access.

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Not to be outdone, Sony has also enabled game streaming on its console, allowing users to use remote play to play their PS4 games on their Mac or PC. If this sounds interesting, we’ve got a full guide on how to stream your games from PS4 to your Mac or PC.

Sony also has a couple of large, interrelated hardware releases lined up for later this year. Playstation VR, Sony’s answer to the Oculus Rift, is set to launch this October, and a more powerful 4K console is due to launch alongside it.

This console, codenamed the Playstation NEO, will be capable of outputting at 4K resolution, and will be fully backwards compatible with existing PS4 games. This enhanced power will not just be used for resolution, it should also work much better with Playstation VR.

In terms of games, Sony’s console has just seen the release of the fourth part of its critically acclaimed Uncharted series, and apparently it’s pretty good. Meanwhile Doom’s hotly anticipated reboot has just launched on both consoles, and Blizzard’s Overwatch is set to land in just a couple of days.

“We have have the advantage in powering gamers through the next decade,” say both companies. To see if that’s true, our Xbox One vs PS4 comparison needs another update.

Xbox One vs PS4 hardware design

Deciding between PS4 and Xbox One is like peeling back an onion, and it starts with the outermost layer, the hardware design.

Xbox One’s dimensions make it a menacing gaming beast that measures 13.5 in x 10.4 in x 3.2 in. It’s also riddled with vents, a design decision to avoid another Red Ring of Death overheating scenario.

Xbox One dimensions

It towers over every other device (though Microsoft advises not to stand it up vertically), and completely dwarfs our smallest home theater gadget, the app-filled Chromecast.

PS4 has a more distinctive angular shape with an overall stylish design. This half-matte half-gloss console measures a slimmer 10.8 in x 12 in x 2 in at its widest regions.

These dimensions make Sony’s machine more media cabinet-friendly, at least next to Xbox One. The new Xbox also weighs a heftier 3.56 kg vs PS4’s 2.75 kg.

PS4 dimensions

PS4 has the advantage of hiding ports too, though as we illustrated in our video comparison, this can actually make it harder to plug cables into the back of the system.

In this way, Xbox One represents functionality over form. A lot of the internal specs are comparable, but Microsoft and Sony really diverged when it came to the designs of Xbox One and PS4.

That may matter since you’re buying into an expensive console that’s going to sit front and center in your living room entertainment system for the next ten years.

Xbox One vs PS4 front and rear ports

More clear cut is the wireless connectivity situation. PS4 makes room for gigabit ethernet and 802.11 WiFi bands b/g/n, while Xbox One includes all of that plus the older 802.11a band.

Xbox One also supports both the 2.4GHz and newer 5GHz channels that are compatible with dual band routers. PS4 limits connections to 2.4GHz, which is likely to have more interference.

Both systems launched with 500GB hard drives and now have 1TB variants, but only PS4 allows user-replaceable internal drives. An Xbox One teardown found a standard-looking drive inside, but replacing it voids the warranty. Be careful.

Instead, the Xbox One June update finally allowed gamers to add external storage to the monster-sized system. There are strings attached. The drive needs to be 256GB or larger and USB 3.0 compatible.

External storage isn’t an option that Sony supports in its “go big or go home” internal approach.

PS4 vs Xbox One rear ports

PS4 and Xbox One are void of remarkable characteristics on the front. There’s a Blu-ray/DVD combo drive to the left and their respective, muted-color logos to the right. PS4 has a pair of USB ports tucked between its sandwich-like halves next to where the disc drive is located.

It’s party in the back Xbox One connections. That’s where it has two USB ports, HDMI in, HDMI out, S/PDIF for digital audio, a proprietary Xbox One Kinect port, an IR blaster connection and an Ethernet port. To the far right is a K-lock in case you want to lug this system around to LAN parties.

Sony went with a minimalist approach when it came to PS4’s rear ports. You’ll only find an HDMI out, S/PDIF, Ethernet and PS4 camera port (marked “AUX”) around back.

Xbox One is more feature-packed in this area thanks to its HDMI in and IR blaster connections used for its TV cable or satellite box functionality. But are you really going to use this feature? PS4 lacks this passthrough technology, opting to stick with gaming as its top priority.

Specs

Xbox One graphics specs teardown

Is PS4 or Xbox more powerful?

PS4 and Xbox One multiply the power of Xbox 360 and PS3. More importantly, they were built with smarter internal designs, drawing from mistakes of last-generation consoles.

Chip manufacturer AMD benefitted the most from these upgrades. Xbox One has a custom 1.75GHz AMD 8-core CPU, a last-minute upgrade over its original 1.6GHz processor.

The PS4 CPU remained clocked at 1.6GHz and contains a similar custom AMD 8-core CPU with x86 based architecture.

This represents a roughly 10% increase in processing power for Xbox One, but the opposite is true when it comes to the all-important graphics processor.

PS4 graphics specs teardown

PS4 boasts a 1.84 teraflop GPU that’s based on AMD’s Radeon technology. The Xbox One graphics chip, also with an AMD Radeon GPU, has a pipeline for 1.31 teraflops.

Microsoft claims that as of last June’s Xbox One update, Kinect-free games can reclaim 10% of the GPU that was reserved for system level processing like Kinect-related skeletal tracking data. But developers still have to take advantage of this cache in new games or patch titles.

Right now, the PS4 specs make room for faster graphics rendering than Xbox One, especially when combined with Sony’s choice in superior system memory.

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Best PS4 vs Xbox One specs for RAM

Even more controversial is the memory under the consoles’ matte black hoods. It’s not the amount of RAM at issue – both are future-proofed with 8GB of RAM – it’s the type of RAM used.

PS4 has a distinct advantage with faster 8GB GDDR5 memory, while Xbox One went with the slower bandwidth of the 8GB DDR3 variety. But, wait, there’s more to it.

Neither system allocates all of that RAM to game developers – some is reserved to run their operating systems.

PS4 reserves up to 3.5GB for its operating system, leaving developers with 4.5GB, according to documentation. They can sometimes access an extra 1GB of “flexible” memory when it’s available, but that’s not guaranteed.

Xbox One’s “guaranteed memory” amounts to a slightly higher 5GB for developers, as Microsoft’s multi-layered operating system takes up a steady 3GB. It eeks out a 0.5GB win with more developer-accessible memory than PS4, unless you factor in Sony’s 1GB of “flexible” memory at times. Then it’s 0.5GB less.

The PS4 and Xbox One specs have similar AMD architecture at their core, but contrast like apples and oranges when it comes to memory. Only developers can determine how this battle is won.

Graphics comparison

PS4 vs Xbox One graphics comparison

Putting all of these specs to the test, developers have had months to build and demo games to us. We’re finally seeing the side-by-side results.

The graphics comparison between multi-console games, like the recently released Grand Theft Auto 5 and Metal Gear Solid 5, have given us the best PS4 vs Xbox One graphics benchmarks.

A gameplay video on YouTube of GTA 5 pans between the two next-gen versions of the game with a definitive answer. The PS4 GPU is able to handle more foliage in environments.

Yes, you literally have to get into the weeds to see the differences, though both the PS4 and Xbox editions of GTA 5 look stellar compared to their last-gen counterparts.

In the Metal Gear Solid 5 comparison, there’s slightly more clarity to the PS4 version. Specifically, distant textures and moving objects appear softer among the otherwise identical Xbox One visuals.

It’s a trend we’re seeing from PS4 games that achieve a 1080p resolution at 30 or 60 frames per second when their Xbox One counterparts run at 720p or 900p at 30 or 60fps.

Watch Dogs is just one game that has a higher resolution on PS4 vs Xbox One

That’s the case with Assassin’s Creed, Call of Duty: Ghosts, The Witcher 2 and Thief. It’s even more evident in Tomb Raider: Definitive Edition where it’s 60fps on PS4 vs 30fps on Xbox One.

Battlefield 4 is one of the few PS4 games with a native resolution of 900p. Alas, it was still just 720p on Xbox One. Not that it matters. Both versions were plagued with glitches for months.

This is in no way a deal-breaker for the Xbox One, and here’s why. First, it’s almost impossible to tell the difference without a side-by-side comparison. You won’t miss the extra grass in GTA 5.

Second, everyone’s hopeful that as developers mature with these two year-old consoles, the gap will close and games on both systems will prove what next-generation gaming is all about.

DirectX12 could make that a reality on Xbox One by making games like Final Fantasy look more reality. Microsoft promises a preview version of its Direct3D 12 graphics toolset by the end of the year. It could make up for the slower DDR3 RAM.

Third, the differences are more noticeable in the Xbox One and PS4 graphics comparisons that include Xbox 360 and PS3. Both Microsoft and Sony leave their last-generation graphics chip architecture and RAM limitations behind, and it shows.

Price

Xbox One vs PS4 price difference

It’s expensive to be an early adopter, and the initial PS4 and Xbox One prices prove just that in each of the countries the systems have launched.

One year ago, the PS4 price was the more tempting deal: $399 for the console and DualShock 4 controller. Xbox One was expensive at $499 for the system, Xbox One controller and Kinect.

Xbox One vs PS4 price

After two official Xbox One price drops, the cost comparison is actually in Microsoft’s favor in the US. The new list price is $349 with a game, but without Kinect included. It’s rumored to go even lower soon, maybe at E3 2015.

Right now, that’s $50 cheaper than the PS4 that doesn’t come with a game. Pre-owned Xbox One and PS4 consoles are even better choices, and in most regions are now becoming plentiful.

The early PS4 vs Xbox One price difference gave Sony an lead at face value, and gamers didn’t seem to mind that the PS4 camera was a separate purchase. Also, for almost a year, it was the only console of the two being sold in countries like India, Japan and Turkey.

Price and availability made for Xbox One’s assured shortfall in the beginning. Now, the price point is moot. Can it catch up?

What's Included

What’s in the box?

There was more value in the original Xbox One Kinect bundle, accounting for some of the initial price difference, so it’s important to dive deeper into what’s included and, of course, what’s not included in the box.

At launch, Xbox Ones came with the console, a controller. and the Kinect camera. These systems also had “Day One 2013″ emblazoned on the cardboard box and at the center of the controller.

That’s a nice perk for Xbox loyalists, though not worth the premium they paid. Subsequent Xbox One bundles have included Titanfall or Sunset Overdrive for the same price, while newer, cheaper systems make Kinect optional.

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All Xbox One boxes contains an HDMI cable, wired mono headset and stingy 14-day free trial for Microsoft’s Xbox Live Gold online service. There’s no USB charging cable, as the Xbox One controller uses batteries out-of-the-box.

Inside the PS4 box is the console and one DualShock 4 controller. Wires include an HDMI cable (Sony learned its lesson after backlash for not including one with the PS3) and a micro-USB cable for the controller.

Don’t throw out the box right away. Tucked inside is a 30-day subscription to PlayStation Plus and a wired mono earbud, contrasting with the just-a-cheap Xbox One headset.

The price difference between the PS4 and Xbox One was a sticking point for gamers over the first several months. Microsoft reshaped the argument at E3 2014 with price-matched Kinect-free Xbox One and may give the console another price drop this year. The question is, will gamers bite in the latter half of 2015?

Controller and cameras

Xbox One vs PS4 controller

The controllers

The most important aspects of the PS4 vs Xbox One controller comparison include comfort, size and battery life, but a lot of this is going to come down to personal preference.

The good news is that both conform to your hands better vs the less ergonomic Xbox 360 and PS3 versions.

The Xbox One vs Xbox 360 gamepad comparison illustrates some of the 40 design innovations like a tweaked D-Pad and extra rumble effect via “Impulse Triggers” in the shoulder buttons.

Microsoft is taking its controller changes even further with the upcoming Xbox Elite Wireless Controller. This pro-level gamepad adds four back pedal, two settings for the right and left shoulder triggers, swappable analog sticks and new D-pad choices. It is expensive at $150.

Xbox One vs PS4 controller

Our PS4 vs PS3 gamepad comparison shows even bigger improvements thanks to the fact that the DualShock 4 is larger this time around. Its handles are easier to grip in long gameplay sessions and its dual analog sticks have a recessed divot. Precision movement is now easier.

The PS4 controller’s front touchpad and mono speaker are a unique way to interact with games, and developers are starting to find ways to adopt this technology into their controls schemes.

Which controller is better? There’s a lot of satisfaction with the PS4 gamepad, but that may have more to do with people’s surprise at how much more comfortable the DualShock 4 is compared to the DualShock 3. That wow factor may wear away soon.

The Xbox One vs PS4 controller comparison ends up being a matter of opinion. Some gamers are accustomed to Sony’s parallel dual analog sticks, while plenty of others opt for offset analog sticks that have been part of the Xbox universe since the beginning.

kinect vs ps4 camera

Xbox One Kinect vs PS4 Camera

A robust games list for Xbox One Kinect and PS4 Camera has been slow to materialize, even though Microsoft and Sony insisted on sticking with controller-free camera inputs.

The good news is that the new Kinect technology is promising, tracking up to six skeletons at once and processing 2GB of data per second. It can pick up heart rates, facial expressions and 25 joints, thumbs included.

The camera’s 60% wider field of vision compared to the Xbox 360 Kinect remedies the annoying “stand 6 feet away” error messages we experienced last time around.

Xbox One Kinect is certainly powerful, it just needs more games. Right now, there are few reasons to keep the 1080p camera plugged in.

Kinect was good on paper, now it just wears a paper dunce cap

There’s a free Kinect Sports Rivals demo that’s fun, and the full version came out last year. It also supports two Xbox-exclusive workout games, Just Dance 2014 and a pair of Harmonix titles: Fantasia: Music Evolved and Dance Central Spotlight. Fighter Within, though, is far from playable.

PS4 doesn’t have as much to offer at this point either, but it’s hard to find in stock. Formerly called the PlayStation Eye, it features two 1280x800px cameras in a body that’s slimmer than the Kinect.

Unfortunately, the PS4 Camera games list is also slimmer. The included robot mini-game The Playroom has been updated since the console launch, but little else besides Just Dance 2014 requires the device.

In the future, Project Morpheus will utilize the PS4 Camera for virtual reality, but the a long-off prospect of VR games doesn’t really explain why the camera is often sold out.

Best games

The best PS4 and Xbox One games

Both the PS4 and Xbox One now have substantial games libraries. The PS4 has just under 600 games, of which almost 100 were exclusives, while the Xbox one has a larger quantity of games (629) but a much smaller amount of exclusives at just 33.

Titanfall stands above all others on Xbox One if you’re into playing Call of Duty-style first-person shooters in which you double jump with a jetpack, wall-run and hop into a giant mech. Sunset Overdrive feature just as crazy-frantic gameplay, while Halo: The Master Chief Collection lets us relive all the old classics, although the experience was somewhat spoiled by a number of technical problems that have never been fully solved.

The Xbox One also saw the return of Master Chief in Halo 5 last year, although 343 Industries is now in control of the franchise now that Bungie has moved on to Destiny duties.

Call of Duty Advanced Warfighter and CoD: Ghosts, while not exclusives to Xbox One, both had downloadable content (DLC) that was a timed-exclusive (by a month) held over PS4 gamers’ heads. That’s all going to change, though, as PS4 became the timed-exclusive home of last year’s Call of Duty: Black Ops 3.

CoD Xbox One vs PS4

Xbox One games in development include the next Gears of War and open-world cop game, Crackdown 3, two games that are sure to join the growing best Xbox One Games list.

The quality and quantity of Sony’s exclusives have really impressed us this generation. Recently we awarded Uncharted 4 a ‘Play it Now’ rating, the highest on the techradar scoring system. Meanwhile, the hard-as-heck Bloodborne and The Witness also impressed.

Finally, remakes of The Last of Us and Ratchet and Clank round out what is a very impressive series of PS4 exclusives.

Xbox One Kinect vs PS4 Eye

Indie games on PS4 and Xbox One

Our most-wanted PS4 games list doesn’t end there because Sony got out in front of supporting independent game developers.

Octodad: Dadliest Catch from Young Horses and Transistor from Supergiant Games came to Sony’s console in April and May last year. Outlast from Red Barrels Studio made the PC-to-PS4 transition in February.

At first, Microsoft maintained that Xbox One games would need to be fronted by a publisher. That changed when the company announced that it would allow self-published games and, in the future, every console would act as a developer kit.

We’re still waiting on this “free Xbox One dev kit,” a potential game-changer when PS4 developer kits cost thousands of dollars. Until that shift happens, Sony has the attention of the indie developer crowd thanks to its early lead.

Apps and backward compatibility

When it comes to apps, Xbox One is in the ever-so-slight lead

Xbox One vs PS4 apps

The Xbox 360 and PS3 proved to be more than just gaming machines and Xbox One and PS4 are no different. Of course, most are shared across both platforms.

All next-gen gamers have access to Netflix, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu Plus, Crackle, Vudu and Redbox Instant and baseball subscription service MLB.TV.

Xbox One corners the app-filled market with ESPN, Fox Now, FX Now, NFL, Ted, The CW, Twitch, Univision Deportes, Verizon FiOS TV and YouTube. It also has Microsoft’s own soon-to-be-defunct Internet Explorer, OneDrive, Skype and Xbox Music and Xbox Video services.

That contrasts with PS4. Sony’s console features Crunchyroll, Epix, NBA Game Time, NHL GameCenter Live, YuppTV, the WWE Network and the free music video playing app VidZone.

Initially, Xbox One had first access to HBO Go before PS4, but now both consoles have the premium channel as an app. At least, if your cable provider isn’t Comcast. Neither system has HBO Now, which remains exclusive to Apple TV.

More niche apps are expected as time goes on, so this is hardly the final list of apps for Xbox One and PS4. Sony backers who are also HBO subscriptions can expect equal next-generation treatment for the the premium on-demand network “eventually,” which just cements Xbox One’s app-filled advantage.

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Are PS4 and Xbox One backward compatible?

This is where the Xbox One vs PS4 comparison has gotten interesting at E3 2015. After teasing Xbox 360 emulation, Microsoft announced Xbox One backward compatibility for Xbox 360 games.

“We won’t charge you to play the games you already own,” jabbed Microsoft at Sony during its E3 press conference. Over 100 disc and downloadable Xbox 360 titles will work on Xbox One this year, and the features of the newer console – like streaming and taking screenshots – crosses over to older games.

Microsoft launched Xbox One backward compatibility in November last year and a recent update saw its functionality expanded to include multi-disc games.

Sony’s PlayStation Now service, meanwhile, launch last year and graduated from open beta to full release in March, but it costs money to rent games. That’s a bummer if you already paid for The Last of Us, God of War: Ascension, Dead Space 3 and Metal Gear Solid: Ground Zeroes on the PS4.

Sony has expanded its Gaikai-based video game streaming service to PS Vita and PlayStation TV, and has even expanded it to include Sony and Samsung made TVs, and then include PlayStation and PS2 to the so far PS3-only lineup.

None of these options are foolproof yet. That means you’ll need to keep your Xbox 360 and PS3 in order to replay Halo 4 and Uncharted 3. You can’t sell the old systems, and that means people won’t be able to readily buy them – they’re more likely to purchase them directly from Microsoft and Sony.

Other PS4 and Xbox One differences

The look of the console, the feel of the controller and the appeal of the games list are the main differences from which consumers will decide on PS4 and Xbox One.

However, there are other factors at play one should consider before buying into a new system. It’s a good idea to converse with friends, keeping mind of their potential bias.

Since there’s no such thing as cross-platform multiplayer, you may be split up when playing Call of Duty on PS4 when all of your friends own it for Xbox One.

Both Microsoft and Sony are charging for multiplayer this console generation, whereas PS3 gamers got to log into matches Scott-Free.

Sony sadly moved closer to Microsoft in this way, while Microsoft moved closer to Sony by tearing down the Xbox Live app paywall. You no longer have to subscribe to stream Netflix and other apps.

Microsoft also supports MP3 and DLNA playback with the Xbox One, whereas Sony neglected to add such compatibility. It’s promised to rectify that in a future firmware update, but hasn’t supplied us with an update in several months.

The PS4 vs Xbox One comparison has evolved in the last 18 months, mostly because Microsoft’s plans have shifted, from Xbox One price drops to more lenient paywall policies to graphics specs upgrades.

These two next-generation consoles are now on a more even video game playing field, which means Sony and Microsoft are going to start throwing Uncharted 4 to Halo 5 Guardians at you, and that’s a win for all gamers.

The expert views

Keza MacDonald – Editor, Kotaku UK

For me it comes down to the variety of games, and PS4 has that sewn up right now. You can play all the biggest games on both consoles, but if your tastes are eclectic, Sony’s indie and in-house lineup is irresistible.

Matt Hill – Editor, Gizmodo UK

PS4 for me. The majority of multi-platform games run better on it, the PS Plus subscription service serves up a stream of good, cheap games – even better if you also have Vita and PS3 – and it looks nicer in the living room. Is that a valid reason? Damn straight it is.

Sophia Tong – Global Editor in Chief, GamesRadar

I have both because I like having options and access to everything (I even own a Wii U). For me it’s about the games, but if I had to choose I do like the Xbox One’s interface more because I can bark commands at it.

Hugh Langley – UK News Editor, TechRadar

It has to be the PS4 right now. Between PlayStation Plus, PS Now, Vita cross-play, and the promise of Morpheus, the whole PlayStation ecosystem feels like it’s growing into something truly terrific. That said, don’t get comfortable, Sony – the Xbox One is definitely beginning to close the gap.

The best PS4 prices and bundles

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The best Xbox One prices and bundles

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Source: techradar.com

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25 Comments
  1. Reply Walker Blanda May 24, 2016 at 10:09 pm

    Grammar…. the difference between knowing your shit and knowing you're shit.

  2. Reply Salvador Abbott May 24, 2016 at 10:25 pm

    Bet you feel like a dumbass now…

  3. Reply Alexane Mosciski May 24, 2016 at 10:40 pm

    Consolers are not the brainiest bunch. :)

  4. Reply Angelo Miller V May 24, 2016 at 10:47 pm

    The reason PCs can search faster is because it's a computer. Remember those things that came out back in 1970 meant to search stuff over this thing called the internet? If not, they're called computers. A PC is a super powered computer. The PS4 doesn't prioritize internet surfing because its a GAMING SYSTEM. You have a better gaming experience and on a bigger screen. All you PC gamers can stick to whatever games you play, and I'll happily play Uncharted 4 in my Oculus Rift VR headset.

  5. Reply Arvid Jenkins May 24, 2016 at 10:47 pm

    >all you PC naggers will be eating your own words in the next 2 years.

    You ready to spend at least another consoles worth of cash on the PS4.5/PS4K to be able to do anything you just listed?

    Besides, the OR is crap. The last thing I want with my VR experience is a company known for Ads and tracking its customers information.

  6. Reply Maybell Bahringer May 24, 2016 at 11:03 pm

    That's was utterly a dumb statement. This is why PC players laugh at console gamers dumb ideology like that. Why would you want a new system that can't also play the older system games? How is not having that option revolutionary? Its actually the opposite. Makes no damn sense this statement. Are you mentally disabled or something?

  7. Reply Maud Legros May 24, 2016 at 11:45 pm

    That's a bunch of bull!

  8. Reply Jarvis Prosacco May 24, 2016 at 11:56 pm

    EH, COM'ERE AND *URP* PLAY CALL OF DUTY WIT ME, WIL YA?

  9. Reply Myrtie Bernhard May 24, 2016 at 11:56 pm

    Wait, you have Windows Vista? NOOOOOB

  10. Reply Candida Skiles May 24, 2016 at 11:59 pm

    Lol.

  11. Reply Mrs. Lindsay Blick DDS May 25, 2016 at 12:17 am

    No dude. You're a nerd if you care that much to be so preemptively defensive.

  12. Reply Karlie Dach May 25, 2016 at 12:41 am

    This will be the first time I own all the systems in a generation AND the first time I've owned an xbox. Backwards compatibility and All the price drops made it too good.

  13. Reply Colten Ebert May 25, 2016 at 1:46 am

    Personally, overall I think the two balance each other out. They have their differences, advantages and disadvantages, and it comes down to what is more important to the individual person. For some Halo is the deal breaker. For others it depends on what console most of their friends are using online. And others whatever display looks nicest at their local Best Buy 😛

    One disadvantage both have – kid friendly titles. Yes I know both are primarily geared towards older gamers and most gamers are older. And there are some titles out there if you look. But there are a lot of kids who want either of these consoles and most mothers do not want to buy their kid a "Gears of War" XBOX One bundle or a "Call of Duty" PS4 bundle.

    One other thing I have noticed. Few people mention the PS4 headset made by Sony. Yes, I know you can get anything from Astros to Turtle Beach. But both Sony and Microsoft have their own headsets and the PS4 one definitely wins this one. I am amazed at how often their $100 headset is rated above headsets two and three times it's cost. The Sony Gold Playstation headset is wireless and virtual surround sound. Full price it is $100 but often on sale. It can be found as low as $50-$60. Which is an amazing deal especially given they are not poor quality headset at all and are constantly rated among the top headsets for Playstation.

    All in all though I think people need to chill. People tend to get so worked up about this. They are both good consoles. I will admit myself a slight Sony bias mostly because of my experiences with other Microsoft products [I wouldn't recommend the Surface Pro 3 to my worst enemy] and because working with Microsoft support is a nightmarish Hell.

  14. Reply Bethany Lindgren DDS May 25, 2016 at 1:59 am

    This article is guilty of an alarming number of biased statments. Here are some examples:

    "PS4 lacks this passthrough technology, opting to stick with gaming as its top priority."

    😀 Are you serious? Since when is a lack of a feature a "benefit"? A feature is a feature. PS4 does not have this feature, and the article uses propaganda to make up for it.

    I think we ALL know that Xbox One has made gaming its top priority. Playstation has Playstation TV. What a joke.

    "Tucked inside is a 30-day subscription to PlayStation Plus and a wired mono earbud, contrasting with the just-a-cheap Xbox One headset."

    Really? A 'wired mono earbud' is preferable to Xbox's "cheap" headset? Why no "cheap" adjective for the wired mono earbud? Is it expensive?

    Speaking of the fact that Kinect was originally bundled, we get "That's a nice perk for Xbox loyalists, though not worth the premium they paid."

    Oh, okay. This leads to the article's next frequently reiterated point:

    "Kinect is a failure"

    Why is the Kinect such a failure? We are told "Xbox One Kinect is certainly powerful, it just needs more games. Right now, there are few reasons to keep the 1080p camera plugged in."

    Yet, about PS4's controller we get "The PS4 controller's front touchpad and mono speaker are a unique way to interact with games, and developers are starting to find ways to adopt this technology into their controls schemes."

    So, on PS4, developers are "starting to find ways to adopt this technology", but on Xbox One, even though there are some games that use Kinect, "it just needs more games."

    Notice the article completely fails to mention what many fans state that they like about Kinect, which includes its voice control and auto-recognition features. I rather like Skype with it since we have international ties.

    Listed under the 'Against' list is "Controller still uses batteries"

    So having to play plugged in is preferable to just swapping out batteries and going wireless? No thanks. Wireless all the way for me.

    I can't stand bias in what is supposed to be objective reporting.

  15. Reply Marilou Green May 25, 2016 at 2:06 am

    I came here to try to decide which is better so I have no horse in the which is better race. That being said popularity is not a gauge of something being any good. That would imply that boy bands and pop musicians are superior musical talents to the likes of classical composers like Mozart.

  16. Reply Reynold Harvey May 25, 2016 at 2:59 am

    Enjoy the lower frame rate and resolution? I'd only by an xbone
    for halo nothing else.

  17. Reply Adrain Streich May 25, 2016 at 3:13 am

    WOW! You mean to tell me that your grammar is terrible in 5 different languages? I think I found the special snowflake. I'd rather be proficient in one language than be mediocre in 4 and decent in 1. And don't act like you know what languages I can and can't speak you pretentious wanker.

  18. Reply Jean Bartell May 25, 2016 at 3:32 am

    Ignorance, ignorance, ignorance. You cannot get DX12 on a DX11 graphics card.

  19. Reply Prof. Tia Reynolds May 25, 2016 at 4:57 am

    I just keep the old system, so it makes no difference to me whither or not it's backwards compatible. Games perform better on the console they were originally intended for anyways and have less bugs and issues.

    Ideally, every system would be backward compatible, but it shouldn't come at the cost of the new system's performance. Not only can it be expensive, but it can also potentially lead to heating problems, etc. There are drawbacks to the implementation of backward compatibility. That's all I'm trying to say.

    As technology advances, it will become more and more difficult to add the hardware/software necessary to have BC. In order to fully emulate older generation games, you would most likely have to redesign significant chunks of code to make games run on old architecture. Or you'd have to integrate tech that makes it more expensive. That’s not necessarily the best way to spend resources and development time. So I say focus on the new games.

    As far as having a console, for me, they have more exclusive games that I want than PC does. Eventually, I would like to build my own gaming PC, but I'll still use consoles, too.

    There's really no need to be so childish and denigrate those who actually have mental disabilities by using it a a slur. I suggest you try to make a point without unnecessary insults. That attitude is not appealing on anyone. Have a good day.

  20. Reply Freddie Predovic III May 25, 2016 at 5:20 am

    ps4 $273 at costco

  21. Reply Jules Champlin IV May 25, 2016 at 5:27 am

    I own both. Why is that so hard to believe?

  22. Reply Zaria Huel May 25, 2016 at 5:42 am

    There is two things you did not mention in your video.

    Firstly regarding the controller. This adds to the PS4 edge in this regard. The PS4 cones with the rechargeable battery and the cable in the console bundle. For the XB1 you need to pay an additional $25 to buy a "Play and Charge" kit. Plus individual XB1 controllers also do not come with rechargeable battery or cable – you would need to buy the more expensive bundle controller. The PS4 controller default has the rechargeable battery. So not only is the PS4 controller generally cheaper it comes with more capability.

    The cameras. I think this might tip it in the PS4 favor since you had judged them even? The PS4 camera is A LOT cheaper. On SALE the Kinect goes for $100. Whereas full price the PS4 camera is cheaper than that, plus on sale I have seen the PS4 camera for as low as $30. Plus because it was initially optional, unlike those of us who bought the XB1 early on, PS4 owners did not fork over an extra $100 to sit in front of their TV [I got my XB1 Jan. 2014]

    I have both. I recently got the PS4 after finally realizing sharing an Xbox one with three brothers is impossible but it just seemed silly to get a second XBOX One.

  23. Reply Ms. Lessie Reichert DVM May 25, 2016 at 8:03 am

    I have a Wii U and love it. I don't have a PS3 or a Xbox 360. Nor did I have a PS2 or an original Xbox.

    I wanted one of the next generation consoles, Wii U doesn't have sports games, or many of the popular games…. so I read up about it, and decided on a PS4.

    I purchased that PS4 five months ago. I had it for a week and then returned it. I didn't like it. I couldn't game quietly at night as the fan was too noisy – it required headphones. The controllers battery life was horrible, constantly recharging it. And I didn't like the games out, not much that I like.

    So, I sort of gave up on the whole next-gen thing, thinking about maybe just keeping my Wii U. Maybe I should get a PS3 or Xbox 360? They have lots more games….

    Well, I researched more and noticed that the Xbox one now has backwards compatibility – I'll be able to play Xbox 360 games, all 'new' games as far as I'm concerned. The game catalog is MUCH larger now. Then I noticed all the free games from EA Access (all the sports games – NHL 15, Madden 15, Fifa 15, racing games). I know all last year, but basically free with a $30/year membership. PS4 doesn't offer it.

    So, my mind changed. I bought an Xbox with Tomb Raider last week, and OMG – I love this system. So much better than the PS4 – not because of graphics or anything – because of all the games, how quiet it is, and I like the controllers better, and the interface.

    I'm not a Microsoft fanboy at all – I actually did NOT want to buy it because it's Microsoft – I own an Apple laptop, and left Microsoft Windows years ago. But, this is my first Microsoft product in a LONG time that I really like.

    I might still get a PS4 later in it's console life – maybe when Uncharted 4 comes out? Most likely in late 2016 if more games come out for it. Or maybe get a used PS3 for $100 to play those games?

  24. Reply Willa Satterfield May 25, 2016 at 8:19 am

    LOL 12 year old detected. You're only calling them ugly because you can't handle the fact that you are 😉

  25. Reply Lorena Fritsch May 25, 2016 at 8:21 am

    How come all the broke nerds have to come up with a long, drawn-out excuse for why they can't afford something?? In this case, a PS4.. but I'm willing to wager you have an equally exhausting story as to why you don't use an iPhone either… smh

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