DonFerrari said:
zero129 said:
Except the Series S is still a next gen system. Its still using the new RDNA2 chipset, its still using the same CPU as Series X, same SSD speeds etc.
It will have no problems playing all nextgen games in a lower res and i already showed you how nvidia has tech that can take a 540P image and upscale it to 1080P while also looking better then a native 1080P image and a 720P image up to 1440P. MS and AMD have also been working on such tech and it makes perfect sense why with the Series S targeting 1080-1440P and series X Targeting 4K as such tech will allow both console to hit that target at a fraction of the cost easy.
But i understand why your downplaying this a lot goopy as you have a lot to be worried about. Like i said in another thread if parents, low income gamers, casual gamers (The biggest majority of gamers pretty much) see Series S multi-plat games such as GTA6, CoD, Fifa etc running in 1080P on Series S and looking just as good (To them) as the PS5 versions i mean you did say before too that people wont care about a few extra pixels or more shadow detail etc if the game looks pretty much the exact same to the casuals. And if Series S cost $199-249 like the rumors vs a $449 ps5 i know what console they will be picking up and i think so do you. MS doesnt care if you buy Series S or Series X so it doesnt matter to them if Series X is mostly for the Hardcore gamer who wants the best graphics.
But Like i said Series S is a next gen console but for 1080P tv owners.
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I find it very unlikely that the DLSS2 or any other technique upscaling an 720p image can look better than the same image in native resolution of 1080p or higher. Or do you mean having your system running to the limit to generate a 720p instead of a 1080p and then with the upscalling your result be better?
Still MS already have machine learning and similar technique, plus Sony have been using temporary reconstruction (not that much different) for a lot of PS4Pro titles.
The upscaling technique isn't superior to native, it is less hw expensive though. And with that power can be used to improve other aspects of image quality.
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Actually, several tech journalists have been saying that DLSS 2.0 actually improves image quality when compared to native 4K. Like here for example: (go to 19:17)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggnvhFSrPGE