razel
Platinum Member
- May 14, 2002
- 2,337
- 93
- 101
Just picked mine up today. Original launch date was Nov. 8 on U.S. voting day which Sony wisely delayed to Nov. 10 or 11. I've been wanting to get one from a local B&M since where they pay for sales tax, but surprise. Sold out and they only had a few. I tried a few days ago again and it wasn't until this weekend where stock is plenty. That's probably the correct reason why Sony delayed. Not enough made to sell. Target's got some awesome deals this weekend. Ended up stacking my coupons (10% tech discount, 10% wishlist, 10% family member's employee discount, $5 off $25, 5% Discover Cashback) from Target and got a killer deal. Low $300s after taxes.
It's the same height as the launch PS4 which I was surprised. Every iteration of the PlayStation controller after the original PS3 Sixaxis, the plastics have gotten cheaper and cheaper feeling, but still sturdy. The new controller looks cheaper but the heaft and weight feels better. It doesn't weigh more, it feels like the weight is tweaked better. More centered.
I though of trying out that nice direct PS4 to PS4 LAN cable 'transfer' feature, but I already learned my lesson about backups. I did the usual PS4 backup to USB, then another separate game saves backup just in case. Downloaded the firmware, swapped the HDD in the Pro for the SSD from my old PS4 and booted up. I have a Vizio D series which someone off reddit mentioned had issues with HDCP 2.2, but mine didn't. Vizio did push out a update last month.
Once the 'XMB' showed, and screen output 4k, you can tell the difference up close with the font rendering and the resolution I the pictures. At 4k you can really get up close to the screen and see that it's displaying high resolution for the content pictures and icons. I now understand why Sony made changes to their display of content. On 1080p it sure seems like a waste of space, but is more fully fleshed out @ 4k. Game detail pages seem to show more info. XMB interface speed does seem more consistent. Not the that base PS4 was slow. Slow is Xbox One, actually XB1 is more just unresponsive, inconsistent.
I have no current PS4 Pro patched games to play, but do have Fallout 4 which 4k support for is upcoming. During install someone mentioned that the drive is loud. It is and stays loud even after completing installation. It stayed spinning fast the entire time downloading the patch for it. Luckily if you eject the disc, pop it back, it will read, spin down and eventually stop just like the base PS4. I think that is just a bug that Sony can fix. Playing, starting the game, disc behavior is the same as base PS4. Again, I think it's just a bug that after reading from the drive at full speed that Sony needs to properly spin it down or stop.
Output with Fallout 4 was 4k. The PS4 is upscaling from 1080p. That surprised me. I thought it'll just output 1080p for non-Pro pached games just like the base PS4. BluRay movies, I think was also 4k, but 24hz. Again, I'd rather have it output original resolution, but at least there was no funny business with BluRay movies. They still look accurate and the disc noise is the same as the base PS4.
My TV is not HDR. I don't recommend cheap HDR sets yet. Your TV must be calibrated for HDR to shine. You can spend another $200-$300 for a calibrator to do this or just buy a known calibrated TV. My D series isn't bad. There's enough off the user menus to get 85% there. THX's calibration app off iPad is fantastic as well. The android version of it for my Nexus 5, the color saturation was off, but all other settings matched the iPad and HTC One's results.
My favorite thing so far is the 4k streaming support. 4k is fully supported in Amazon and YouTube and the PS4s power shines with the interface. There is no lag, searches are quick. You do need at least 50mbps for 4k. I think 4k BluRay is 100mpbs. My connection is 70mbps and you need to give it a few seconds for 4k to display. Once it's at 4k it stays. Tons of hot k-pop videos in 4k off YouTube. Shame that on Xbox1s, YouTube isn't 4k yet. it's not even 1080/60. C'mon Google/MS seriously.
I'll be back for more impressions after enjoying it more.
It's the same height as the launch PS4 which I was surprised. Every iteration of the PlayStation controller after the original PS3 Sixaxis, the plastics have gotten cheaper and cheaper feeling, but still sturdy. The new controller looks cheaper but the heaft and weight feels better. It doesn't weigh more, it feels like the weight is tweaked better. More centered.
I though of trying out that nice direct PS4 to PS4 LAN cable 'transfer' feature, but I already learned my lesson about backups. I did the usual PS4 backup to USB, then another separate game saves backup just in case. Downloaded the firmware, swapped the HDD in the Pro for the SSD from my old PS4 and booted up. I have a Vizio D series which someone off reddit mentioned had issues with HDCP 2.2, but mine didn't. Vizio did push out a update last month.
Once the 'XMB' showed, and screen output 4k, you can tell the difference up close with the font rendering and the resolution I the pictures. At 4k you can really get up close to the screen and see that it's displaying high resolution for the content pictures and icons. I now understand why Sony made changes to their display of content. On 1080p it sure seems like a waste of space, but is more fully fleshed out @ 4k. Game detail pages seem to show more info. XMB interface speed does seem more consistent. Not the that base PS4 was slow. Slow is Xbox One, actually XB1 is more just unresponsive, inconsistent.
I have no current PS4 Pro patched games to play, but do have Fallout 4 which 4k support for is upcoming. During install someone mentioned that the drive is loud. It is and stays loud even after completing installation. It stayed spinning fast the entire time downloading the patch for it. Luckily if you eject the disc, pop it back, it will read, spin down and eventually stop just like the base PS4. I think that is just a bug that Sony can fix. Playing, starting the game, disc behavior is the same as base PS4. Again, I think it's just a bug that after reading from the drive at full speed that Sony needs to properly spin it down or stop.
Output with Fallout 4 was 4k. The PS4 is upscaling from 1080p. That surprised me. I thought it'll just output 1080p for non-Pro pached games just like the base PS4. BluRay movies, I think was also 4k, but 24hz. Again, I'd rather have it output original resolution, but at least there was no funny business with BluRay movies. They still look accurate and the disc noise is the same as the base PS4.
My TV is not HDR. I don't recommend cheap HDR sets yet. Your TV must be calibrated for HDR to shine. You can spend another $200-$300 for a calibrator to do this or just buy a known calibrated TV. My D series isn't bad. There's enough off the user menus to get 85% there. THX's calibration app off iPad is fantastic as well. The android version of it for my Nexus 5, the color saturation was off, but all other settings matched the iPad and HTC One's results.
My favorite thing so far is the 4k streaming support. 4k is fully supported in Amazon and YouTube and the PS4s power shines with the interface. There is no lag, searches are quick. You do need at least 50mbps for 4k. I think 4k BluRay is 100mpbs. My connection is 70mbps and you need to give it a few seconds for 4k to display. Once it's at 4k it stays. Tons of hot k-pop videos in 4k off YouTube. Shame that on Xbox1s, YouTube isn't 4k yet. it's not even 1080/60. C'mon Google/MS seriously.
I'll be back for more impressions after enjoying it more.
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