| Sevengen said: I've seen both consoles at a friends house, got to spend a good amount of time with each, and while the PS4 is defiitely a powerhouse of a console, the X1 was the only machine out of the two that actaully made me feel like I was interacting with something 'next-gen'. We played Battlefield on both systems and there's no doubt which one looked better. The PS4 version. Played Killzone also and can't really say I was all that impressed by it. Great graphics, but not really enough going on to make it feel like the vanguard shooter of the 8th gen. Sorta boring after a couple days. Spawn. Shoot. Die. Cruised around Sony's UI for a bit and there simply wasn't all that much to do, to interact with. The X1 on the other hand, the downgrade in Battlefields graphics notwithstanding, truly felt next-gen to me. Let me explain that a little bit. Every gamer understands that better graphics won't equate to a better experience, it's the level of interaction you have with the game that matters, and that holds true with the consoles themselves. |
Yes everything was amazing on the X1, how could it not be? The words of fanboys fall on deaf ears. Who wants to check facebook while gaming? Who uses facebook on a 50" TV? My phone and tablet and occasionly PC are there for that(Free as well). The majority of things Sony can patch in later. I'm glad Sony made the PS4 a games console first and formost. They can add in all the other features later and slowly. As the games will get more demanding and complex the X1 will start to show its weaker power and will struggle to render at 1080p. I hope at that point you can just turn the games off and just play with the other features while we the gamers enjoy the Games







