Sony reveals much more expensive and powerful PlayStation 5 Pro
After years of rumour, speculation and hype, Sony has confirmed it is launching a more powerful – and much more expensive – version of its hugely popular PlayStation 5 console.
The PS5 Pro will be able to show more advanced graphics and display the most demanding games at higher, more consistent frame rates.
But that added power will come at a cost: the PS5 Pro will be the most expensive console from Sony to date.
It will cost £699.99 when it launches on 7 November this year – hundreds of pounds more than the PS5.
“The price point of the PS5 Pro will inevitably cause a lot of commentary,” analyst Piers Harding-Rolls from research firm Ampere said.
He said the firm appeared to be betting that the console’s improved performance would encourage users to upgrade their existing hardware and spend more on software.
Mark Cerny, lead architect of the PS5, said it was “the most powerful console we’ve ever built”.
He said it sought to resolve a problem gamers had faced for years – whether to play a console game in so-called “fidelity mode”, which favours visuals, or “performance mode”, which makes a game smoother, though at the cost to how it looks.
He said the PS5 Pro was about “removing that decision, or at least narrowing that divide”.
Companies have released updated versions of their own consoles with minor revisions for decades, but this release indicates the comparatively new trend of “pro” hardware is here to stay.
Generally, this means hardware changes to current-generation consoles that lets games look better – but critically these tweaked consoles don’t have exclusive games.
In other words, games will still be released for PS5, and gamers can choose whether to play them on a regular console or a pro model.
It’s Sony’s second major foray into this space after 2016’s PS4 Pro, which brought 4k graphics to the original PlayStation 4.
And it comes three years after Nintendo released its own take on a pro model – a Nintendo Switch with a larger, better screen.
Graphics leap
Today’s announcement from Sony is not as significant as the PS4’s jump to 4k graphics, but it still represents a step forward in home consoles.
It comes at a time when PCs have been getting increasingly powerful, with the release of Nvidia’s Geforce 40 series of graphics cards in 2022, which have put PCs firmly ahead of home consoles in the race for the best visuals.
But it’s worth remembering just one of these graphics cards can cost as much as a whole PS5, so consoles tend to strike a balance between the best visuals and the best price.
Like with the last console generation, this release means Sony will now have multiple versions of its PS5 available to consumers, with different price points and specs.
Rumours spread widely ahead of the announcement, with fans speculating on the features an upgraded console might have.
Chief among them were unsourced claims that the PS5 Pro would be backwards compatible with games from previous Sony consoles – with some reports suggesting this would go as far back as the original PlayStation.
There was nothing in the announcement to confirm the rumours.