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Sooooo what's the haps, could Scorpio launch this fall with this 480X GPU at 5.5TF?
Can they add a CPU in that RX480 die that soon?
Sooooo what's the haps, could Scorpio launch this fall with this 480X GPU at 5.5TF?
The initial backlash was more about the Neo being the first mid-generation console to leak, there was a lot of confusion, Scorpio hasn't had the push back because most of those concerned have had some time to digest and accept it.
Let's have some more Neo rumor threads to see if people are still upset, especially now that both console makers are going this route. I'm not convinced there is a massive "4 years is ok, but 3 years is a dealbreaker" narrative you're trying to sell.
I think it's more to do with the fact that Sony was the market leader and they are doing something that seems weird (starting a fresh generation, essentially) while Microsoft's Xbox One started on very rocky ground and a new console could right the ship so to speak. Scorpio will be a console launched under Microsoft's new leadership and, assuming Spencer meant this, Scorpio will not simply be Xbox 1.5. There's more unknown about Microsoft's plan for Scorpio than Sony's plan for PS4k (which is presumably meant to be a mid-generational upgrade that's more prepared for PSVR).
Sooooo what's the haps, could Scorpio launch this fall with this 480X GPU at 5.5TF?
Scorpio will be Xbox 1.5 but they just won't market it as Xbox 1.5.
Don't be so sure. If they put in Zen and HBM2 AND Vega, that will have been pretty much a generational upgrade, especially on the CPU and RAM sides.
CPU power has been the one thing that has been lacking on consoles since the start of seventh generation.
Scorpio will be Xbox 1.5 but they just won't market it as Xbox 1.5.
#Dreamcastfeelings...
Do you remember? A 294ghz machine killing a 200hz just launched machine one year before its own launch...
Don't be so sure. If they put in Zen and HBM2 AND Vega, that will have been pretty much a generational upgrade, especially on the CPU and RAM sides.
CPU power has been the one thing that has been lacking on consoles since the start of seventh generation.
Maybe they have by saying Neo is PS4 slim, available October for 299$.Think about the RAM in PS4, it was discussed for the longest time how PS4 having 4GB of RAM would affect the performance since XB1 had 8GB of RAM, and how GDDR5 memory might not make the gap as big as you might think just by looking at the ammount if RAM they had, etc. Then Sony was like "Oh by the way, PS4 have 8GB of GDDR5.". Or when PS3 suddenly had gyro controls too when Nintendo was trying to hype up Wii. That's what I'm expecting. The unexpected move. That sneaky sudden move that MS aren't ready for. I just find it unlikely that Sony hasn't planned ahead better than it seems right now.
Can they add a CPU in that RX480 die that soon?
Maybe they are launching it Spring 2017?But none of the rumors have suggested Scorpio was 2016, they specifically said 2017.
Don't be so sure. If they put in Zen and HBM2 AND Vega, and angle it for next year, that will have been pretty much a generational upgrade, especially on the CPU and RAM sides.
If it releases this year then I think HBM2 is out. But next year? Possibly.
I thought rumors were over 4 times performance.A traditional generational upgrade is on the order of ~8x power increases.
Rumours are placing this at more like 2.5-3x at best. So while that's a significant upgrade, calling it generational is probably a bit too far. It's using next generation memory but overall, not really.
Just look at the respond for Neo compare to Scorpio.
Neo have mix reception but Scorpio is nothing but anticipation.
I thought rumors were over 4 times performance.
A traditional generational upgrade is on the order of ~8x power increases.
Rumours are placing this at more like 2.5-3x at best. So while that's a significant upgrade, calling it generational is probably a bit too far. It's using next generation memory but overall, not really.
I think this will end up being the new generational upgrade. This along with backward/forward compatibility, makes me think the very definition of console generations is about to get much fuzzier moving forward.A traditional generational upgrade is on the order of ~8x power increases.
Rumours are placing this at more like 2.5-3x at best. So while that's a significant upgrade, calling it generational is probably a bit too far. It's using next generation memory but overall, not really.
I think it's more to do with the fact that Sony was the market leader and they are doing something that seems weird (starting a fresh generation, essentially) while Microsoft's Xbox One started on very rocky ground and a new console could right the ship so to speak. Scorpio will be a console launched under Microsoft's new leadership and, assuming Spencer meant this, Scorpio will not simply be Xbox 1.5. There's more unknown about Microsoft's plan for Scorpio than Sony's plan for PS4k (which is presumably meant to be a mid-generational upgrade that's more prepared for PSVR).
Your referring to GPU power with that number, but the CPU increase from Xenos to Jaguar was only around 3x, in which Jaguar lagged far behind other competitors at the time to begin with.
Going from Jaguar to Zen(if they really can compete with i5 and i7 branded CPUs) would be on another level from that.
And i don't know HBM2's bandwidth roadmaps, but i do know they have been hyping it 1tb/s bandwidths for a while now?
If the "2 consoles a cycle" thing doesn't work out for Sony, they could just change it up next cycle, and widen the gaps between units again. But for right now, this is what they've chosen to go with to see if the market will respond.
The only people who are going to be freaking out, are people who are too emotionally invested in the fact that MS will have a more powerful unit.
MS waited, they get the rewards of waiting that time.
But at the same time, they ARE going to have to wait until next year for that power, or else Sony would have come in at around the same power as them.
Which makes me think MS is going for Vega and HBM2 and Zen.
There's no way they could put Zen and HBM2 into Scorpio this year without Sony having bothered to do it as well.
Not just GPU power, also total system memory i.e.
PS > PS2 > PS3 > PS4
2+1 (3) MB > 32+4+2+2 (42) MB > 256+256 (512) MB > 8 GB
More than tenfold increases each time. I think 16GB could be a plausible figure to upgrade to, but 16GB HBM2? Ehhhh not so sure. To preserve compatability we might even see something odd like high speed DDR4 alongside the regular fast ram buffer. You're correct that the PS4/XB1 CPUs were extremely pathetic (and still are), but I don't think we're going to see something 3-4x more powerful in these price ranges and thermal envelopes in early 2017.
The memory increase will not happen again at the same size like it did before.
Seems like you're getting your hopes up. As far as I'm aware, they don't have a cheap 5.5 TF APU, which is likely what would go into a console. Your hype may be clouding your judgment. The rumor states late 2017, so to jump to late 2016 based on a graphics card release seems to be a stretch (though I've kept my hype in check entirely because these rumors never quite pan out how they initially are reported).The more I think about it, the more I think Scorpio will come this year.
That just could be my delirium talking though. The wait for E3 is painful this year.
You strike me as a knowledgeable fellow, what do you think MS's plans are for the Scorpio?, gaining the lead in the next gen wars by getting the more powerful unit on shelves?, who is going to make games that benefit from said specs when the majority of the gaming population will most likely remain on Sony's side? (PS4+PS4K), just MS exclusives and the occasional 3rd party money hatted exclusive?, would developers be willing to gamble on making next gen games for one sole SKU?, chances of MS having success versus having it blow up in their face?
The initial backlash was more about the Neo being the first mid-generation console to leak, there was a lot of confusion, Scorpio hasn't had the push back because most of those concerned have had some time to digest and accept it.
Let's have some more Neo rumor threads to see if people are still upset, especially now that both console makers are going this route. I'm not convinced there is a massive "4 years is ok, but 3 years is a dealbreaker" narrative you're trying to sell.
So, Scorpio going to stick with traditional CPU+GPU dual chip format for APU 1 chip format?
I don't know much about engineering, but if they want to put RX480 with a CPU into 1 chip, either the chip is huge or they have to cut some part making it less powerful right?
It kinda looks to me like some are coming around to the realization that having the most powerful box, while a nice thing to brag about, isn't nearly as important to the success or overall appeal as some might want to think.
Well, there is the rub isn't it?
My view is that they have been beaten down by the power argument for so long, they just want to be in the lead again in that respect, and put all the bad blood of XB1 behind them and hopefully gain the hype factor. Which i say good on them. They should do what they can.
But their ecosystem is still their biggest flaw, because devs are still making games for XB1 and PS4, and they want full compatibility forwards and backwards to keep their user base on board, they will have to compromise on taking advantage of Scorpio for that, atleast for a few years. By which time, Sony's "Neo" mid gen cycle will have been over with and their next box acting as the full generation upgrade from PS4 will be around.
Personally speaking though, i think power really means very little. What matters are the games and the users interest in them. And MS, on the console side, still hasn't figured that out beyond North America....which they are still losing more market share to PC and Sony every day.
Sony has cultivated an ecosystem over the years that just generally is hard to beat. Even at their worst in the PS3 years, they still beat back a 10 million 360 lead.
And a year later Sony comes out with PS5 with 10 TFLOPS!
Well, there is the rub isn't it?
My view is that they have been beaten down by the power argument for so long, they just want to be in the lead again in that respect, and put all the bad blood of XB1 behind them and hopefully gain the hype factor. Which i say good on them. They should do what they can.
But their ecosystem is still their biggest flaw, because devs are still making games for XB1 and PS4, and they want full compatibility forwards and backwards to keep their user base on board, they will have to compromise on taking advantage of Scorpio for that, atleast for a few years. By which time, Sony's "Neo" mid gen cycle will have been over with and their next box acting as the full generation upgrade from PS4 will be around.
Personally speaking though, i think power really means very little. What matters are the games and the users interest in them. And MS, on the console side, still hasn't figured that out beyond North America....which they are still losing more market share to PC and Sony every day.
Sony has cultivated an ecosystem over the years that just generally is hard to beat. Even at their worst in the PS3 years, they still beat back a 10 million 360 lead.
It kinda looks to me like some are coming around to the realization that having the most powerful box, while a nice thing to brag about, isn't nearly as important to the success or overall appeal as some might want to think.
Regardless of what the specs end up being for either of these new consoles coming out, we know that the people actually making the games have more than enough power at their fingertips to do amazing things. And both right now appear like they will be pretty big upgrades over their predecessors.
RX480 is less than 250mm2 in size.
Xbone chip was 363.
Panos Pananay with some Nutella spread will make shit happen and dreams come true.So there is still enough space to fit a CPU.
So there is still enough space to fit a CPU.
A traditional generational upgrade is on the order of ~8x power increases.
Rumours are placing this at more like 2.5-3x at best. So while that's a significant upgrade, calling it generational is probably a bit too far. It's using next generation memory but overall, not really.
I mean... PC is fine right? Is PC having trouble maximizing graphics in games? A lot of these third parties release on PC too. Why would they have trouble utilizing the Scorpio all of a sudden? The didn't have any trouble upping the rez on PS4 games vs. XB1.
They'll come up with the most TFLOPS $399 can get you, at some point... For some reason I doubt they're that interested into introducing a premium priced console (ever again).
I mean... PC is fine right? Is PC having trouble maximizing graphics in games? A lot of these third parties release on PC too. Why would they have trouble utilizing the Scorpio all of a sudden? The didn't have any trouble upping the rez on PS4 games vs. XB1.
At the end it's more important how the market the new console. If Phil wants to go on with "big numbers", they'll call it a new generation and people will think it is. That said, this will be a tough call if they don't offer exclusive non-VR games.
Of course, it is possible to screw that one up, like Nintendo did with WiiU, whose name made many people think it is just an upgrade of the Wii.
Personally speaking i was talking about making the most out of the specs on offer (Scorpio), such a thing would most likely require games to be built with Scorpio's specs in mind. Not just PS4/XBO games with higher-res, better IQ and frame rate. Only MS exclusives and games that MS pays developers to develop for Scorpio exclusively would really make them (specs) show.
Most AAA PC games are constrained by what the consoles can do because of the user bases and the inherent limitations of that hardware. The Scorpio, which has such a lead in power will be no different having to support the lesser hardware.
Having more refined sliders, higher resolutions and framerates for the same games is inherently different from taking full advantage of the platform, unless they make exclusives for it, which generally is seen as a bad move unless it is marketed as a brand new platform, something Neo is not intended to be from what we know.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IH2w2l1JTs4
Even after all these years, i still laugh.
I'm not sure winning the spec wars for a mid-generation console upgrade is worthwhile, past the marketing bullet-point. In order not to screw over the vanilla console owners, you have to implement limitations that might have normally helped differentiated the power difference
Ultimately, a 1+ or 2+ teraflop difference limited soley to visual fidelity may not translate into enough of a discernable difference from your nearest competitor in the eyes of the average consumer to buy you much.
Going to be very interested in seeing how it all plays out...
I dont think the GPU is the issue, I think Zen and HBM2 being ready is the issue if that is the direction they are going. Both of those seem to be slated for Spring 2017.Sooooo what's the haps, could Scorpio launch this fall with this 480X GPU at 5.5TF?
Except Sony is doing the same thing. So they have to.
And people who don't have a Xbox One but have a PS4 might be more interested in also picking up an XB1 is it's the most powerful option.
And it's not like the lower priced Slim model won't still be available as well.
Except Sony is doing the same thing. So they have to.
And people who don't have a Xbox One but have a PS4 might be more interested in also picking up an XB1 is it's the most powerful option.
And it's not like the lower priced Slim model won't still be available as well.
MS definitely has to, and likely planned to from the beginning...I'm just saying that usual "spec wars" comparison gets deflated a bit given the built-in vanilla console limitations.
A couple teraflop difference would matter more within the traditional generational cycle (ala PS5 vs Xbox Next). You might be able to get added features or performance that sets you apart, but the vanilla console limitations put a cap on most of that.