Soundwave said:
Equivalent hardware isn't required to be part of the same generation. By that logic then a 3090 even is a different generation from the PS5 or a 2080, but no one seriously says that. Or XBox Series S is a different generation from Playstation 5. No one seriously says that either. Generational leap has to be something where the successive hardware runs the majority of its games that the other hardware that you're trying to claim is in a different generation cannot run. Like for example a Playstation 2 versus a Playstation 1. If a PS1 could run PS2 games at just moderately lower settings and resolution but otherwise it was running the same games, then you have a problem there, that is not a generational leap any longer. That distinction becomes entirely meaningless in that case. That argument doesn't work anymore when the hardware you're trying to say "is last generation" is running many of the same games even at lower settings. The Switch 2 will likely have a ton of PS5 ports for various reasons, more than the Switch 1 had in common with the PS4, but there's already a system that basically does this, Steam Deck will likely in a few years have something like 75, 80, 100 PS5/XSX only games that it runs. That automatically invalidates it as a "PS4 level hardware". If it's "PS4 level hardware" it shouldn't be running those games period, in any form other than like maybe 2 frames per second. |
This doesn't make sense. Switch is running hogwarts legacy, steamdeck runs most ps5 games and steamdeck sometimes loses to ps4 so what you are saying is false.