
MinusTheBear
Audioholic Ninja
Here are my quick pros and cons of each of these consoles having lived with them since launch.
PS4: Pros
Xbox One: Pros
Xbox One: Neither pro or con
Xbox One: Cons
I'm probably forgetting a lot stuff here. What are your thoughts on these machines?
PS4: Pros
- Best game controller Sony has ever made. A built in speaker, light sensor and center touch pad differentiate it the most from the Xbox One Controller.
- Charging controller in standby via USB only takes a few hours.
- Install times for games are extremely fast (were talking a few minutes or less) until you can start playing the game while the rest of the game installs in the background.
- Majority of 3rd party games are running at 60FPS and native 1080P.
- Console runs extremely quiet. It doesn't add any noise floor to the room.
- Internal power supply.
- Smaller than the Xbox One
- Blu-ray load times and picture quality are excellent.
- Theoretically more powerful and it's showing early in the life cycle.
- The rubber of the dual joysticks are very cheap. The joysticks wearing out is a concern.
- The light sensor on the controller (whether it's blue, red, green etc) is very bright and distracting. I haven't seen a purpose to it yet other than killing the battery life on the controller. There is no option to turn off the light either.
- Battery life is poor IMO 8-10 hours. I feel like I am constantly recharging batteries.
- Game library isn't there yet.
Xbox One: Pros
- Kinect 2. Yes I mean it. The voice controls work great for turning on/off console, navigating the system menus. I especially like the voice controls for Blu-ray and music playback (pausing, starting, fast fwd etc). The Kinect 2 integration for games is hit and miss right now.
- My favorite controller is still the Xbox 360 one, although I prefer the staggered nature and build quality of the dual joysticks compared to the DualShock 4.
- Rumble on the triggers
- Blu-ray playback is the same as PS4. Although I do all my Blu-ray on the Xbox one due to the ability to use voice commands.
- I prefer the UI as well as Xbox live.
- Console is also quiet (though not as quiet as the PS4).
Xbox One: Neither pro or con
- Controlling your set top box via the Xbox One and Kinect 2 through HDMI IN.
Xbox One: Cons
- The left and right bumpers and battery pack on the controller are a step back from the Xbox 360 version. I was expected to be blown away by the controller. I wasn't.
- Kinect 2 gesture control. I don't find it works very well and never use it.
- External power brick makes noise while in 24 hour standby mode (you might be able to hear it if you had the console in bedroom and sleeping at night when the noise floor is very low in the house)
- Larger than the PS4, though not as as big as the Oppo BDP 103
- Currently the Kinect 2 bottlenecks 10% of the Xbox Ones GPU (although its said they will change that to 2% in a future update)
- Majority of 3rd party games are not running at 60 fps and native 1080p. Developers are having to tradeoff resolution for frame rate. 60FPS and native 720P/900P. Some think this is due to the GPU restriction from the Kinect 2.
I'm probably forgetting a lot stuff here. What are your thoughts on these machines?
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