Watch this: My Exclusive PlayStation 5 Pro Demo: What $700 Gets You, and Why It Matters
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Sony published a blog post detailing the improvements.
The PS5 Pro features a graphics processing unit that has 67% more compute units than the GPU in the current PS5 console, Sony said. And the PS5 Pro also has 28% faster memory. Expect faster gameplay rendering and an overall smoother play experience.
There's also something called advanced ray tracing, a more powerful way to reflect and refract light, which allows the rays to be cast at double, and at times triple, the speeds of the current PS5 console.
One of the key changes coming with the PS5 Pro is a technology called upscaling, which uses artificial intelligence to create images with more detail and lighting effects without as much need for raw performance.
The new console also includes PS5 Pro Game Boost, which may stabilize or improve the performance of more than 8,500 backward compatible PS4 games playable on the PS5 Pro. Enhanced Image Quality is also available to improve the resolution on select PS4 games. The new console will launch with the latest wireless technology, Wi-Fi 7, in territories supporting this standard, and it'll also support VRR and 8K gaming.
As you might expect, the PS5 Pro is coming in time for holiday gift purchases. You can preorder the PS5 Pro for $700 beginning on Sept. 26, and it'll be available at stores and directly from PlayStation.com on Nov. 7.
The console will include a 2TB SSD, a DualSense wireless controller, and a copy of Astro's Playroom preinstalled. It's also available as a discless console, meaning you have to purchase and download games from Sony or its partners, with the option to purchase the currently available disc drive for the PS5 separately.
Read more: Sony's PlayStation 5 Is Entering the 'Latter Stage of Its Life Cycle': What That Means
The PS5 Pro is compatible with current PS5 accessories, including PlayStation VR2, PlayStation Portal, DualSense Edge, Access controller, Pulse Elite and Pulse Explore.
Several PS5 games will be patched with free software updates to take advantage of the PS5 Pro's features. These games will feature a PS5 Pro Enhanced label and include Alan Wake 2, Assassin's Creed: Shadows, Demon's Souls, Dragon's Dogma 2, Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth, Gran Turismo 7, Hogwarts Legacy, Horizon Forbidden West, Marvel's Spider-Man 2, Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart, The Crew Motorfest, The First Descendant, and The Last of Us Part II Remastered.
Sony currently sells the PS5 for a starting price of $449 for the model without a disc drive.
When Sony announced its PS5 was entering the "latter stage of its life cycle," earlier this year, the company didn't explain how its approach to the device would change, other than the cryptic promise to "put more emphasis on the balance between profitability and sales."
Rumors suggest Sony won't be dropping prices much but will instead focus on convincing existing PS5 owners to trade up to a PS5 Pro, or get non-PlayStation owners to buy a PS5.
One way Sony will make its case is by offering many years of backward compatibility. The PS5 can play "an overwhelming majority" of PS4 games, no matter if they were bought on disc or digital, and we now know that the same is true for PS5 games on the PS5 Pro. And though we don't yet know if the inevitable PS6 will offer the same capability, it's likely Sony will want to keep that feature.
Sony kept making and selling PS4 consoles more than a year past the PS5's launch in the fall of 2020.
Many gamers are excitedly awaiting the launch of the PS5 Pro, but it hasn't been the only device generating anticipation. Microsoft accidentally leaked its Xbox plans in a bunch of legal documents last year, giving gamers a look at its own planned Xbox upgrade, code-named "Brooklin." The device is shaped like a cylinder -- not a trash can -- and it's supposed to offer more storage and use less energy.
Nintendo, meanwhile, is expected to announce an update to its popular Switch console, which has sold more than 139 million units and more than 1.2 billion games since its launch in 2017. Industry rumors suggest the Switch 2 will be a beefed-up version of the current console.
Source: cnet.com