Xbox One vs. PS4

Discussie in 'Algemeen' gestart door Dusky Demon NL, 26 mei 2013.

  1. Tim

    Tim Active Member

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    M'n tv gaat sneller aan :+
     
  2. BigKabuto

    BigKabuto Well-Known Member

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    Het opstarten van de 360 duurt toch 17 seconden? Hier werd toch zo'n probleem over gemaakt? Maar wtf...zie hoe lang de 360 erover doet om te starten EN in te loggen en zie hoe ziek snel de X1 is in die Instagram video.
     
  3. Hybrid

    Hybrid Well-Known Member

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    Dat kan je volgens mij instellen. Ook als die helemaal uitstaat kan die alleen luisteren naar Xbox On. :)
     
  4. Flavourlicious

    Flavourlicious Game Developer Moderator Redacteur

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    Aah zou wel nice zijn voor mensen die hem helemaal uitzetten. Ik ben wel benieuwd naar het stroomverbruik van de consoles in verschillende modi.
     
  5. BigKabuto

    BigKabuto Well-Known Member

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    Ik lees op UnionVGF dat sommige reviews zeggen dat de U.I. een verbetering is tov de PS3, maar dat er ook weinig goede filters waren om de boel te organiseren en ook verwarrende settings. Kortom...het klinkt bij mij als een typische Sony U.I., gewoon niet extreem speciaal net zoals PS3 en Vita. Ik kijk juist uit naar de U.I. van de X1 weer.
     
  6. Ravnoss

    Ravnoss Praetorian

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    Allemachtig ik lees net dat de PS4 nog steeds geen Wireless N 5Ghz ondersteunt. Dat is toch te gek voor woorden, dat betekent dat je in stedelijke gebieden waar de 2.4Ghz range vaak vol zit, weer niet lekker wireless online kan. Wat mij betreft toch een enorme misser (zeker aangezien dit al enige jaren een standaard is)
     
  7. xboxlol

    xboxlol Active Member

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    Een echte gamer gamed met draad. :+

    EDIT: maar even serieus, Sony kennende is dit het allereerste model. Waarschijnlijk ondersteunen de modellen over 0,5/1 jaar de 5Ghz band.
     
    Laatst bewerkt: 13 nov 2013
  8. Lethal AK47

    Lethal AK47 Broodje kroket is leven XBW.nl VIP

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    Is wel zo. Met draad is altijd fijner en stabieler. :p
     
  9. MAD 1976

    MAD 1976 Useless info here...

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    Tis PSN en XboxLive.:+
    Yep, vandaag binnen gekregen.:thumbs:
    (helaas nog niet kunnen spelen)
     
  10. Vinelli

    Vinelli Active Member

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    17 seconden, 1 seconde who cares...
     
  11. MAD 1976

    MAD 1976 Useless info here...

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    Vraag dat maar eens aan je vriendin....trust me, she cares!:)
     
  12. Ravnoss

    Ravnoss Praetorian

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    Och ik ben niet perse een fanatiek online gamer, en ik merk op mijn niveau geen verschil tussen mijn 5Ghz netwerk en gewoon een UTP kabel op mijn 360. Ik heb er juist voor gekozen in mijn huidige huis om alle UTP kabels de duur uit te doen en alles via een stevig draadloos netwerk te doen.
    Daarom ben ik redelijk pissig dat de PS4 dit niet ondersteunt, mijn 360 doet dit nota bene al jaren.
     
  13. Burnfout

    Burnfout Active Member

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    Ja wel vreemd, mijn xperia z kan het wel. Gelukkig heb ik bedraad.
     
  14. xboxlol

    xboxlol Active Member

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    Zoals er al vaker gezegd is, heeft Sony een console gebouwd met hoge specs maar daarbij het laten afweten met extra features.

    Wat je altijd nog kunt doen is een wireless bridge te kopen (die 5Ghz 802.11N ondersteund), zodat je die met je draadloos netwerk kan verbinden, om die vervolgens met een UTP kabel aan je PS4 te hangen. Mooi is het niet, maar het is een oplossing. ;)
     
  15. Hybrid

    Hybrid Well-Known Member

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    Beide 1080p

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
  16. Lethal AK47

    Lethal AK47 Broodje kroket is leven XBW.nl VIP

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    Het enige verschil dat ik zie is het kenteken. :+
     
  17. BigKabuto

    BigKabuto Well-Known Member

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    Vind de game sowieso niet heel mooi. Alleen de weerseffecten zijn nice gedaan.
     
  18. Hybrid

    Hybrid Well-Known Member

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    Jackfrags had vandaag nog een vid van Rivals. Ik krijg er eigenlijk koppijn van na een minuut.

     
  19. BigKabuto

    BigKabuto Well-Known Member

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    Nou...echt totaal niets speciaals aan gewoon. Heb het idee dat ik naar Most Wanted uit 2012 aan het kijken ben, alleen iets scherper.


    http://www.popsci.com/article/gadgets/playstation-4-review-lot-same

    Duidelijke taal in dit artikel. Lijkt gigantisch op een PS3. Iets zegt me dat dit minder het geval zal zijn bij X1.

    PlayStation 4 Review: A Lot Of The Same


    Remember: you don't really love your PlayStation. You love the games, and the PlayStation--now on its fourth incarnation--is the boxy black vessel for those games. You don't love the box any more than a toaster that plays Netflix.

    This is important to remember, since the PlayStation 4 as a system feels so, so much like the generation before it. Imagine staring at both as they sit below your TV, then imagine Tommy Lee Jones sauntering in and Men In Black-style brain-wiping the last console out of your skull. You will not be able to determine The Future of Gaming and the soon-to-be obsolete.

    If you're reading and comprehending this, you're likely old enough to remember the PlayStation 3. And I'd guess you've changed a lot more in the past seven years than Sony has.

    How It Looks

    The PlayStation 4 is actually a radical departure in a few ways--it's just debatable whether all of those ways are positive. On top, it looks half matte, half almost-laminated. A crack along the front contains all of the stuff, like the two USB ports where your controller can charge. To play a game on a disc, you insert it into the PlayStation 4's gaping maw, like a sacrifice to the gods. The crack glows blue while it's on, and orange when it's in standby mode, waiting for your next commands. The whole thing is slanted in front, like it got stuck in a wind tunnel for an hour.

    Here's the weird part: there are no buttons on the console. Like, at all. Not even a fake power sign you put your thumb over. You touch the top half of the crack to turn it on, and the bottom to eject the game disc. This is fine when you figure it out, but isn't immediately apparent. I spent the better part of 10 minutes poking it like a Space Odyssey chimp at the obelisk.

    There's also a new controller. Stacked up to the last generation's controller, it definitely looks sleeker--a little less angular than its predecessor, which, when viewed from the side, looks like an uncomfortable high-heeled shoe by comparison. There's a "share" button on this generation, which, when pressed, lets players share a screenshot or video clip (the PlayStation 4 automatically records the last 15 minutes of play, just in case something happens that you have to show around). A lot of real estate in front is given to a touchpad. There's a little mini-game loaded on to each PlayStation that uses this, but I haven't quite figured out why it exists besides that.

    Also: the controller-to-TV sensor on the front glows different colors. I like this. I do not understand why.

    Booting Up

    After you've cracked the mystery of How to Turn on the PlayStation, Nancy Drew, and added all of your information--Wi-Fi password, email address, etc.--you will be directed to the home screen. (Sold separately: the PlayStation Camera, which scans your face and detects when you're around, and can be used to identify you automatically. For those worried the era of constant surveillance we're living in hasn't gone quite far enough yet.)

    If you have a PlayStation 3, you will immediately understand almost everything about the navigation screen, because disappointingly little about it has changed, at least on the main screen. You click on the same cartoonish little icons to navigate: a smiling house-shaped box for your profile, two smiling squares to see the friends you've added. (The best one: a "messages" icon that features both an envelope and a speech bubble. Either would've done, but here you get two-for-one.) Tiles with real images on them also appear to take you to announcements about new games, info about games you've played, a web browser, and a feature where you can stream what you're playing over the service Twitch and invite other people to watch.

    You can also check out what your friends are doing, in a feature that, for better or worse, looks like a social network. See what your friends have been playing, what they've accomplished in their games, and so on. This isn't a particularly beautiful interface, either: it's a stream of faces and text-snippets floating down for as long as you feel like scrolling. (I've just previewed this last part--it wasn't fully available for review.)

    I was really hoping Sony would do away with the wavy blue background on the interface that makes you feel like you're getting seasick on the digital ocean, but alas, it makes its return.

    All in all, you can't help but feel that a regular-old-update to the PlayStation 3 could've given us nearly the same interface, which is a bummer.


    Killzone: Shadow Fall Guerrilla Games

    Under The Hood

    You're probably either the type of person who cares about every spec in your machine, or you don't care about them at all unless they translate into practical applications. Personally, I'm in the latter category. But in short: the PS4 is faster, able to render images better, and, yes, has some practical bonuses because of that.

    In short, there's a combination CPU/GPU system that splits up some of the work in the PS4. What does that mean? Mostly, that's how we've got features like faster video processing. Also, the PlayStation 4 has an option for background downloads. Rather than sit and wait for a download to finish before you can start playing the game, you can hop right in after a certain percentage of it is finished. It's like video buffering: you start watching before the entire video is really ready to be watched.

    Also on board are two USB 3.0 ports. Here's the biggie with those. The PlayStation 3, in some kind of egregious oversight, didn't allow controllers to charge while the PlayStation 3 was turned off. Here that's remedied. Even better: the battery life on the controller looks like it got an upgrade. I'm still waiting for mine to kick hours after a minimal charge.

    There's also a voice-control option in the PlayStation Camera you can use to start games or other features. Say, "PlayStation," then the name of the game or certain functions and it'll pop up. I'm not sure I totally understand the point of features like this. The last thing I want to do is exercise my vocal cords to select a game, especially when it's a mere push of the control stick away. But there it is.

    Games

    Games! Games. The most important part of any game console. The selection of titles available at launch is... pretty sparse, honestly. They're almost exclusively sequels or games that are also appearing on the PlayStation 3.

    The selection of titles available at launch is sparse.


    Sony made a big deal at its announcement about the imminent arrival of the PlayStation 4-exclusive game Killzone: Shadow Fall, a new installment in the popular sci-fi shoot-'em-up franchise Killzone. Now it's pretty apparent why: it's the best representation right now of what the PS4 can do. The figures and landscapes on-screen are sharp, fully etched-out, even if it's not as dramatic of a leap as PlayStation users saw between the PS2 and PS3. It just looks like a really lovely PS3 game. (I won't go into too much depth on these, but especially not on this one, since the gameplay isn't as breath-taking as the graphics. "Press R2 to kill him!")

    On the other end of the spectrum is a PS exclusive called Knack, which looks like something inspired by Pixar. You control a smart-mouthed monster called Knack. Knack punches out robots. It is fun. But also, definitely a game that could've easily appeared on the PS3 with very little lost. The characters and gameplay are like a high-quality animated movie, and no one would bat an eye seeing it on a past console.

    Rounding out the launch-day lineup is the reliable B-list of gaming. You will find:
    •Madden 25: the 25th (!) installment in the football game franchise
    •Battlefield 4: the fourth installment in another shooty franchise
    •Need For Speed: Rivals: the umpteenth installment in the racing game franchise
    •And my personal favorite: Just Dance 2014, where people just dance to very recent pop hits, judged by the PlayStation's Eye of Sauron. The newest songs include hits by Psy, of "Gangnam Style" fame, and Robin Thicke's "Blurred Lines." Send this game to Mars. For one, it will no longer return to haunt us, and two, it will give future Martian settlers an exact idea of what life was like today.

    One great thing Sony is doing now, though, is selling all titles as digital downloads the same day they sell them as discs. The future!

    Should You Buy This?

    Unless you are desperately jonesing to play a game like the new Killzone, then no, or, at least, you should wait as long as you can. This doesn't feel like a step forward; it feels like a step sideways. A nearly identical interface, a slew of sequels, and a design that's not all there. (I was more fond of the Wii U, which turned out to be a complete commercial disaster, because it at least felt like something different.)

    At some point, if you're regular gamer, you'll probably have to bite the bullet. A game will come out that you'll have to play, and you'll buy the console to play it. But remember: you'll be doing it for the game, not the console.


    Nog meer reviews...niet gepost toch?


    http://reviews.cnet.com/ps4/
    http://www.joystiq.com/2013/11/13/review-playstation-4-f2c91e51/
    http://techland.time.com/2013/11/13/playstation-4-review-sonys-comeback-console
     
    Laatst bewerkt: 14 nov 2013
  20. BigKabuto

    BigKabuto Well-Known Member

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    Hier...uit Joystiq's review over party chat:

    We moeten het even tijd geven en zoals hij ook zegt...flink uittesten, maar toch.
     

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