PS5 vs Xbox Series X How They Compare 1 Year Later
Itâs been a year since I reviewed the Xbox Series X/S and PlayStation 5, and a lot has changed in that time. Weâve had 12 months to live alongside them, watch their game libraries grow, and see developers harness the next-gen capabilities of both consoles. Or, we should have, at least. Itâs been a year of supply shortages, so a lot of people are still stuck in ridiculous digital lottery wait-lines in hopes of snagging a new console.
Usually, a âversusâ article would pit the Xbox Series X/S versus the PS5 head-to-head, comparing their specs and stats and games. Weâll get to all that for sure, but the interesting question isnât âHow do they stack up?â Itâs âHow do they stack up, given, yâknow, everything?â
They're Tough to Buy![PlayStation 5 and controller](https://media.wired.com/photos/6189e1e7de1cbf7845f548de/master/w_1600%2Cc_limit/Gear-Xbox-vs-PS5.jpg)
By the end of September this year, Sony had sold 13.4 million PlayStation 5s. Microsoft doesn't release sales numbers, but an analyst for market intelligence firm Niko Partners estimated that it has sold around 8 million Series X and S consoles, combined. Those are some healthy numbers considering the supply shortages, but they donât really paint a picture of how hard it still is to get your hands on either console. An entire year has passed, but itâs still a choice between paying extra to scalpers on eBay and Amazon and repeatedly signing up for up-to-the-second in-stock notifications and waiting in an online queue during a âdrop" of new consoles at a retailer. They sell out in seconds, leading to a lot of disappointed would-be next-gen gamers.
Both the Wii and the Nintendo Switch were scarce and therefore hard to buy well into the second year of their lives, but itâs unusual for Xbox and PlayStation. Supply would usually start to match demand by now. You should normally be able to pick one up at any local electronics store or buy one for its actual retail price on Amazon. That's not the case.
The Game Libraries Have ImprovedIt took a year, but both consolesâ game libraries are beginning to be decent. They're still not great, and there arenât nearly enough tentpole titles to make either console a must-buy, but things are improving.
Exclusive titles still aren't here. We wonât see Halo: Infinite on the Xbox until the end of 2021, and Horizon: Forbidden West doesnât come out for PlayStation until February 2022. Spider-Man: Miles Morales and Demonâs Souls are fun on PS5, but the Xbox Series X/S feels like an echo chamber at this point.
Perhaps by design, it's also hard to tell whether a new game is actually a next-gen or previous-gen title. Aside from exclusives, most new games are still coming out with Xbox One and PlayStation 4 versions at the same time.
The nice thing is, both consoles seem to have all the good third-party games. Thatâs good for anyone who manages to buy either console, but not so great for Sony and Microsoft, since thereâs increasingly little to differentiate the two consoles.
Graphics and Performance![Microsoft Xbox One and controller](https://media.wired.com/photos/6189e1e88353f535d2e72b6e/master/w_1600%2Cc_limit/Gear-Xbox-vs-PS5-Xbox-One.jpg)
The Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5 couldnât look less alike. Oneâs a literal box; the other is a curvilinear space oyster that looks like a background doodad from Mass Effect. But on the inside, theyâre practically twins.
Theyâre the same price. They have the same 8-core AMD Zen 2 processors with slightly different clock speeds (the PS5âs 3.5 GHz to the Xboxâs 3.8 GHz), the same AMD RDNA graphics chipsets (again with minor differences in clock speed), the same 16 GB of RAM, almost the same off-the-shelf storage capacityâ"825 GB for PS5, and 1 TB for Xbox Series X. And they both output to 8K, 4K, and 120 Hz.
The cheaper Xbox Series S, by contrast, is really more of half an upgrade over the Xbox One. It doesnât output games at true 4K, but it does support ray tracing andâ"theoreticallyâ"120 FPS gameplay. Itâs a good choice if you donât have a 4K TV and donât plan on getting one, but Iâd advise most people to just hold onto their money and wait until the Series X is more readily available. Itâs more future-proof, thanks to its more powerful hardware.
In terms of storage space, PS5 has the leg up hereâ"but only if youâre comfortable cracking open your PS5 and installing some new hardware. You can bolster its stock 800 GB hard drive with an additional M.2 drive, but doing so takes some hardware know-how and isnât for everyone. You can also use an external drive that you just plug in, but you canât use that extra space to store games youâre currently playing, only to store them instead of say, deleting them and re-downloading them. For the Xbox Series X, you just have to buy an expansion card and plug it into the console. Theyâre super easy to install and work great, and you can play games off of them no problem. Unfortunately, theyâre expensive at $220 for 1 terabyte of extra storage. Both consoles should have shipped with more internal storage and easier expansion options. The Xbox Series S is even worse, shipping with only 500 GB of storage.
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PS5 Has a New Controller![Xbox One controller](https://media.wired.com/photos/6189e1e80892f62228cc5bee/master/w_1600%2Cc_limit/Gear-Xbox-vs-PS5-Xbox-One-Controller.jpg)
Xbox Series X/S controller
Photograph: MicrosoftThe easiest way to tell these two consoles apart is by their controllers. The Xbox Series X/S controller is largely unchanged from previous generations. Itâs the usual Xbox controller youâve used since the Xbox 360, with an added share button. On the other hand, the PS5 boasts a radical redesign (at least, for Sony, which has had the same controller for decades) and a force-feedback system.
![Playstation DualSense controller](https://media.wired.com/photos/6189e1e8748096a2f3317edb/master/w_1600%2Cc_limit/Gear-Xbox-vs-PS5-DualSense.jpg)
Sony DualSense controller
Photograph: SonySony's new DualSense controllers provide more than your standard rumble. The trigger buttons can have varying levels of resistance, depending on in-game factors like which weapon youâre usingâ"so you can actually feel it when youâre using a hair-trigger handgun versus the heavier pull of a large rifle.
The haptic feedback system also provides a really three-dimensional sense of where that feedback is coming from. Instead of two rumbling motors in the palm of your hand, the motors in the DualSense controller can vibrate across the controller. When it works, itâs amazing. For example, Assassinâs Creed: Valhalla looks and plays great on both consoles, but with the DualSense controller, the trigger pull is different for each type of bow, so you can really feel the extra tension in your big-bad-predator bows, or the quick, feather touch of light bows. It gives you a real sense that these weapons are different, and that they feel different in your characterâs hands. Few games take advantage of the DualSense's new bells and whistles, but it's fun when they do.
The Services Are Costly, and a MustBoth consoles have multiple subscriptions that are required to play online games, and another to access a library of games to play for âfree.â Xbox Series X has Xbox Live Gold and Game Pass Ultimate, and the PS5 has PlayStation Plus and PlayStation Now.
Game Pass Ultimate is the best. It gives you access to online multiplayer and has a fantastic, very current 100+ game catalog that you can download on your console and often PC. You can actually install the Xbox app on a gaming laptop or desktop and download a lot of them with ease.
PlayStation Plus offers just a few âfreeâ games you can download each month, and is required to play games online. Then thereâs PS Now, which is more like Xbox Game Pass, but focuses on older PS4, PS3, and PS2 games. It gives you access to a deep catalog of 800-plus older PlayStation games to play online.
These subscription plans are all super confusing. Why is it like this? At this point, nobody knows.
The Winner: Everyone and No OneSo, which console is the winner here? Neither. Because it doesnât matter how good your console is if nobody can buy it. PlayStation 5 is the better console, and since more of them are selling, your friends are more likely to have it or get it, but I wouldnât call it a winner.
DualSense is great, but internally, both consoles are pretty much identical and it shows. Itâs like Sony and Microsoft both bought the same Honda Civic, but Sony installed a cool-looking after-market steering wheel. Sure itâs cool, but is it really that much better? Or are they both kind of aggressively medium?
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