Digital Foundry goes hands-on with PlayStation 5's new 1440p support. A better image for PC monitors and a potential win for older HDMI 2.0 TVs too:
8K display support may still be AWOL but Sony surprised us all last week by revealing a new firmware beta test, opening the door to 1440p functionality for PlayStation 5 amongst a range of other smaller scale new features and quality of life upgrades. With its plans to break into the PC monitor market, adding support for 2560x1440 functionality makes sense and while the firmware beta works well, a little more work is required to ensure this update delivers everything it should.
And it's at this point that it's worth stressing that just like the 1080p option on PlayStation 5 on the vast majority of games, 1440p simply changes the video output - it doesn't change the rendering resolution of the titles you play, so performance will be the same as 4K.
A test cycle is required to enable 1440p, allowing the PS5 to figure out which refresh rates are supported at 1440p resolution and whether HDR works or not. Once you're running 1440p, the next question concerns what actually happens with games running at various resolutions. The Sony blog post describes how the console outputs native 1440p, but are we talking about just a 1440p signal or will games that natively render at 1440p output with a pure 1440p 1:1 pixel mapping output? The truth is, it's a little complicated.
日本 最新ニュース, 日本 見出し
Similar News:他のニュース ソースから収集した、これに似たニュース記事を読むこともできます。
Leaked Spider-Man screenshots show how it looks running on PC | VGCSpider-Man screenshots have leaked showing how it looks running on PC.
続きを読む »
Macs look like the future of PC gaming, whether PC gamers like it or notApple silicon could turn Macs into gaming consoles
続きを読む »
New Sonic Origins update finally fixes Tails’ AI issues | VGCA new update for Sonic Mania is currently in the process of rolling out, with PlayStation players having received the update earlier today.
続きを読む »
SK Hynix's first 238-layer memory boasts 50% faster SSD speeds, but c'mon it's not really 4D is it?238-layer 4D NAND Flash memory is coming straight to our PCs next year.
続きを読む »