instead of having a standard and a budget model, that would be like having a budget and a pro model, with nothing in-between. cornering the PS6 on both ends. 1 console that's cheaper, and 1 console that has superior performance.
This sounds familiar - why does it sound ... oh wait - that was literally the entire Series strategy, except launching at even less competitive prices.
Hell we had like... 12 months of people talking about the 'brilliance of the sandwich strategy' on this very forum in the lead up to launch.
But yes - as always when suggesting corporation should keep doing the same thing that failed over and over again
I made a comment in another thread on this - but the only time XBox SKUs were selling competitive with Playstation - was when they were 20-40% cheaper throughout their respective lifetimes.
There was never an XBox competitive at price parity, and the less said about more expensive SKUs - the better.
Btw - I'm one of the people that was cheering for expensive XBox SKU that is basically PC in a shiny case at apple prices because I would also be a target audience. But that was
before MS went full retard and fired their only good Hardware leader (Panay) and scuttled their only good hardware product line (Surface Book).
And I also acknowledge it would never be a mainstream product regardless.
I'm not well versed on the latest CPU tech. Can someone educate me on what's with the heterogeneous mixture of zen 6 and zen 6c cores? What are the strengths of each and why is there a mix?
Power scaling and silicon utilization. It's completely useless as a concept on consoles.
But an NPU is a dedicated unit, just for AI. While on a GPU, it's spread out across the shaders.
That's largely irrelevant when there's 3000 TOPs on the GPU and 100 TOP NPU next to it.
The only 'performance' rationale for it would be the same as with CPU - if NPU is more general purpose/flexible to the point where certain workloads become more power efficient.
But I fear the actual rationale (having a CoPilotCoProcessor in hardware) is a lot more likely. There's a lengthy history of all 3 companies doing this with their consoles (adding a small bit of extra silicon for a single function that 98% of their gaming audience couldn't give less of a crap about), and MS has done it the most of the 3 to date.