Xbox One vs PS4
Introduction
The Xbox One and PS4 are almost here. Before the year is out, both consoles will be out. And what shoes they have to fill.The Xbox 360 and PS3 have both sold over 75 million units, and have been around for the best part of a decade. The Xbox One and PS4 will define the future of home console gaming.
But which one should you pre-order? We've compared the two consoles to help you make the right decision.
VIEW the argument:
At the time of writing, you can still pre-order an Xbox One for its release. It's not game over yet, though. Part of the reason why Sony has run out of pre-order stock already is that it is holding back consoles to go into stores on launch day. You might need to get up early, but it'll be worth it.
As yet, we don't know how long after launch the 'second wave' of PS4s will start shipping out - as it's highly likely that the initial in-store stock will sell out very quickly.
PS4 - £349, “holiday” 2013
There's a fair bit of bet-hedging surrounding the release dates of the next-gen consoles. Both Sony and Microsoft are yet to reveal their exact release dates, although both have more-or-less confirmed that they'll arrive in November 2013.
This is a very important month, as it's just in time for the christmas rush. Each year, a console 'wins' the christmas buying season, and this year will be more heated than ever.
Microsoft announced its release plans earlier than Sony, but it's actually Sony that has let the most information slip.
In early July, Sony teased the new console with a poster featuring the image of a solar eclipse. It just happens that a solar eclipse will be visible across America on 3 November. A coincidence? We think not.
Microsoft's Xbox One is highly likely to arrive within a week or two of this date too.
There is some suggestion that it may be the other way around, though. Toys 'R' Us has said that the Xbox One will arrive on 29 November, two weeks before the Sony PS4. It seems unlikely that the Sony console would touch down this close to Christmas, though - the commercial costs of such a move could be great.
As well as potentially arriving a little earlier, the Sony PS4 also benefits from being cheaper. It costs £349.99 while the Xbox One costs £429 - a disparity of £80.
The price difference has earnt Microsoft much criticsm, but it's an easy issue to explain away. The Xbox One comes with a Kinect sensor, which is needed to make the console function. Current-gen Kinect costs around £100, and as the next generation model is much more advanced, it accounts for the entire price difference.
Xbox One – 10 per cent larger than 360, 'big black box' design, 3.18kg
PS4 – Slanted design, 2.8kg
The Xbox One and PS4 are completely different prospects bodywork-wise. Microsoft’s Xbox One is far, far larger – an imposing black monolith of the living room. The PS4 is sleeker, slimmer and less likely to dominate your under-TV space.
Both keep the severe, black and masculine style that’s common to games consoles, though.
This picture demonstrates the size difference very well.

The Xbox One is 10 per cent larger than its predecessor, the current Xbox 360. It weighs around the same as the current console, though, at roughly 3kg. The PS4 is only marginally lighter, at 2.8kg. This shouldn’t come as a great surprise, though, as they both have to fit in similar components.
Why the extra size in the Xbox One? It’s likely that part of the internal volume of the Xbox One’s case is there to aid cooling. Overheating was a significant problem in the Xbox 360, responsible for causing many of the red ring issues that plagued the console’s earlier years.
What is it? The next-gen instalment of the key Xbox game series – an extra-terrestrial first-person shooter.
Dead Rising 3
What is it? Zombies, zombies, zombies. A third-person action adventure. It’s darker than the previous games and is set in an open-world environment rather than a hemmed-in mall.
Forza Motorsport 5
What is it? The Xbox’s answer to Gran Turismo. A half-serious driving game with hundreds of cars and beautiful visuals.
TitanFall
What is it? A first-person multiplayer shooter from the old heads of the development team that made Call of Duty: Modern Warfare (Infinity Ward.)
Killer Instinct
What is it? A one-on-one fighter resurrected from the 16-bit days of gaming. Think Mortal Kombat with even weirder characters.
Sunset Overdrive
What is it? A colourful mutant-filled action game with a world reminiscent of Jet Set Radio – but packed with zombies. Made by Insomniac games.
Ryse
What is it? A brutal first-person melee action title from Crytek, the maker of the Far Cry and Crysis games.
Project Spark
What is it? A ‘game making’ game that’s comparable in many respects to Sony’s LittleBigPlanet.
Quantum Break
What is it? An action-packed shooter in which you can manipulate time. Here’s hoping it’s better than the current-gen Timeshift.
Below
What is it? An artsy-looking indie adventure from the maker of Sword and Sworcery.
What is it? A racer that’s out to take on Forza Motorsport 5 with a more arcade-like take on racing.
Killzone: Shadowfall
What is it? A gorgeous-but-grim first-person shooter, continuing the PlayStation-exclusive series.
Infamous: Second Son
What is it? The third large-scale Infamous game, in which you play as a man with superpowers.
Knack
What is it? A bright and breezy third-person action-adventure, and one of the most family-friendly launch titles.
Octodad: Deadliest Catch
What is it? A bonkers indie game in which you play as an octopus.
The Order: 1886
What is it? An action game set in Victorian London.
Read, our round-up of the best Xbox One games and best PS4 games to look out for
When the Xbox One was first announced, and at its E3 showing, we believed the console would need to connect to the internet regularly in order to function. The positive side of this is that you would no longer need a game disc to play a game - making the Xbox One a jukebox of instantly-playable installed games.
Sounds good, eh? There were several negatives to this approach.
Games rental was thrown out the window, as was free sharing of game discs between friends. Games trade-ins were to be limited to approved partners too - sure to make games retailers a bit anxious.
This caused a huge backlash among gamers, especailly as the Sony PS4 is to use a more traditional disc-based approach to its anti-piracy measures - with no need for an online check-in.
On 19 June, Xbox's Don Mattrick wrote on the Xbox blog that the online check-in is to be scrapped. You will no longer need internet access to play an Xbox One. But you will need to have the disc in the drive in order to play a game, and although downloadable versions are available as well as the disc type, these can't be shared among friends at all.
Sony never had any plans - that we know of - to use an aggressive anti-piracy DRM system. While there are sure to be downloadable updates for games, you won't need to have internet access to play a disc-based game with the PS4. Unless it's an online-only multiplayer game of course.
Therefore, the Xbox One and PS4 will function much as the PS3 and Xbox 360 do today.
Commercially, the biggest impact this will have is in allowing the second-hand games market to function just as it does now. It'll be up to the games publishers to introduce ways to dissuade buyers from purchasing used games - most likely by offering one-use unlock codes that give access to additional content in the boxes of new games.
PS4 - AMD 8-core Jaguar CPU
The next Xbox and PS4 use extremely similar CPUs, made by AMD. Both use an APU setup, which links together both CPU and GPU into one package.
They’re 8–core chips using ‘Jaguar’ cores – a term picked by their maker AMD to denote their chipset generation. Although it’s yet to be officially confirmed, the PS4 chipset is expected to be clocked slightly higher than the Xbox’s at 2GHz rather than 1.6GHz.

The difference in core processor power isn’t likely to be that great, though, and that both consoles use x86 architecture will make life much easier for developers – simplifying the porting process.
Xbox One – Comparable to Radeon HD 7000-series, 8GB DDR3 RAM with 32MB eSRAM
PS4 - Comparable to Radeon HD 7000-series, 8GB GDDR5 RAM
The PS4 and Xbox One both use an APU processor that combines the CPU and GPU into a single unit. And both are made by AMD.
At first glance it seems like their GPUs may be identical, but they are not. The PS4 graphics processor is 50 per cent more powerful, with 1152 shader processors against the Xbox One’s 768. Realising that this sounded pretty bad, Microsoft worked on upping the One's power a bit and on 2 August announced that its GPU speed from 800MHz to 853MHz. It's a nice tweak for the tech heads, but doesn't see the Xbox One match up to the PS4.
Having extra processing power will let the PS4 perform more tasks simultaneously – which should in theory allow for more impressive visual effects.
A more impressive GPU is matched with more impressive-sounding RAM. The PS4 uses GDDR5 RAM, while the Xbox One has more conventional DDR3 memory – and both have 8GB of the stuff.
GDDR5 has much higher bandwidth than DDR3, designed for intensive applications such as in graphics cards, while DDR3 is ‘bog standard’ system memory.
If DDR3 was all the Xbox One had, it’d be in serious trouble. But it also has an eSRAM buffer that should help to bridge the 100GB/sec bandwidth gap between the two RAM types. It has a 32MB chunk of eSRAM that will function as a frame buffer.
The question is – will it really mitigate the speed gap between DDR3 and GDDR5? We’ll have to wait to see what the game devs working with the hardware say.
Read our full strip-down of the Xbox One and PS4 graphics hardware
With a more powerful GPU and, seemingly, faster memory, the PS4 is clearly out in front on graphical specs.
Quite what level their power is at is a point of contention, though. Many have compared the consoles to the 7000-series cards from AMD, which tend to cost around £150 with 2GB of memory on-board.
However, EA’s chief technology officer Rajat Teneja claims that the consoles are a whole generation ahead of the top-end PCs on the market. To some that’ll seem like a ridiculous statement when top-end gaming PCs cost thousands of pounds, and these consoles will cost a few hundred.
What’s less contentious is that the Xbox One and PS4 are around 8-10 times as powerful as the previous-gen Xbox 360 and PS3. However, let’s not forget that an increase in graphical fidelity requires an exponential increase in power – so we won’t be looking at games that look 8-10 times as good.
But you can bet they will look a ‘whole lot’ better.
PS4 – PlayStation Move
Microsoft has thoroughly re-worked motion sensor Kinect for the next-generation Xbox One. It’s now a mandatory part of the Xbox experience, and comes bundled with the console.
Xbox One Kinect, previously dubbed Kinect 2.0, is also much higher-fidelity. It uses 1080p cameras where the first-generation Kinect has a much lower-res VGA sensor. Even budget phones use higher-res cameras than that.
The new Kinect also uses an IR sensor to more reliably discern depth of its view field – making it much more accurate at judging the distance between the Kinect and objects.
Its field of view is also much larger, making it easier to setup and use. Kinect is programmed to discern all joint movement, and even separates thumbs from your fingers. It’s far more powerful than the Xbox 360’s Kinect.
The PS4 stays using Move, the motion control system used by the PS3. However, Move is now built into the controller.
There’s a move light on its back, used by the PS4 console to judge its position, while harvesting accelerometer data from the controller’s insides for higher-fidelity motion-sensing.
Sony does have an additional bit of tech that provides more Kinect-like features, the PS4 camera. Like Kinect, it's a camera 'bar' that will sit by your TV. The plan was reportedly to include this with the console as standard, but Sony backtracked when it realised it could beat the Xbox One on price by not including it.
The PS4 camera costs £50 so would have substantially increased the cost of the console. However, it's not a mandatory part of the PS4 experience, where Kinect is with the Xbox One.
Read more about upcoming next-gen games
PS4 - Streaming services inc. Netflix, LoveFilm
Both consoles will offer a wide array of streaming services at, or just after, launch. Their US launched flaunted a bunch of familiar logos, suggesting among these we’d see Netflix and Hulu – the two biggest streaming services stateside.
Having Netflix is a big boon for us in the UK too, but we’re just as concerned with getting BBC iPlayer, 4OD, LoveFilm, Demand 5 and ITV Player. These UK-centric services are yet to be confirmed by either manufacturer, but as most feature in the current-gen consoles, their appearance in the next batch is only likely to be down to sluggish moves by the respective TV/streaming operators.
To date, Sony has been much quicker at adopting these new services. However at present Sky’s services are available through the Xbox 360, and not the PS3. No Sky deals with the next-generation consoles have been announced, yet.
The Xbox One’s big multimedia win is the use of HDMI pass-thru with ARC to let the console control your television. At the console’s launch Microsoft showed off asking your console to search for TV programmes using the Kinect’s voice recognition.
However, some of the Xbox One’s TV functionality will not be in the UK – at launch. Microsoft’s idea is that the Xbox One will become the centre of the living room, by making you do your TV watching through the console.
The Xbox One's media services will also require a subscription to Xbox Live. Netflix, LoveFilm and even the TV control feature will also demand an Xbox Live Gold account. This costs around £40 a year, although shop around and you'll find a year's subscription for around £30.
Sony has confirmed that you will not need a subscription to PlayStation Plus to access video streaming services on the PS4. PlayStation Plus is Sony's Xbox Live Golf equivalent.
Find out where you can place an Xbox One pre-order
PS4 – Blu-ray
In the previous generation of consoles, the PS3 went for Blu-ray and the Xbox 360 dipped a toe in the HD DVD water, with an optional HD DVD player accessory. The HD DVD format died a death, although thanks to the relatively small storage needed by this generation’s games, it could make do with DVD.
For this generation, DVDs won’t be good enough. Unless we’re going to start having games with 10 discs.
Some have suggested that this generation’s consoles will do without optical drives, this is premature. Both consoles use a Blu-ray drive, with discs capable of storing up to 50GB a piece.
Xbox One – Minor re-design, Kinect redesign
PS4 – Moderate re-design, integrated Move
Sony has given the Sixaxis a fairly significant redesign with the PS4. There’s now a lot more control packed into the pad’s body, with a trackpad that sits between the D-pad and the buttons.

There’s also a Move light on the controller’s rear, letting it function like the Move motion control ‘sticks’ available today. The final – slight - change in direction comes with the share button, which lets you quickly share moments of gameplay.
There are some pretty serious changes here, but it shouldn’t feel too different in the hand. The controller’s shape is much the same as the current-model.

The Xbox One controller is a lot closer to the current edition, but Microsoft does claim that more than 40 improvements have been made. What's new?
Most of the changes relate to ergonomics, but the new controller also has an integrated battery compartment, Wi-Fi Direct and new triggers
Xbox One vs Sony PS4 – Stock
If you wanted to pre-order a PS4 for the console's release date, you're already too late. On 8 August, Sony announced that the initial stock allocation for the PS4 had run dry - massive numbers of pre-orders saw to that.At the time of writing, you can still pre-order an Xbox One for its release. It's not game over yet, though. Part of the reason why Sony has run out of pre-order stock already is that it is holding back consoles to go into stores on launch day. You might need to get up early, but it'll be worth it.
As yet, we don't know how long after launch the 'second wave' of PS4s will start shipping out - as it's highly likely that the initial in-store stock will sell out very quickly.
Xbox One Unboxing Video
Want a closer look at the Xbox One? On 8 August, Microsoft posted an unboxing of the upcoming console. It offers precisely zero surprises but gives you a better look of how big the console is.Xbox One vs Sony PS4 – Price and Release Date
Xbox One - £429, November releasePS4 - £349, “holiday” 2013
There's a fair bit of bet-hedging surrounding the release dates of the next-gen consoles. Both Sony and Microsoft are yet to reveal their exact release dates, although both have more-or-less confirmed that they'll arrive in November 2013.
This is a very important month, as it's just in time for the christmas rush. Each year, a console 'wins' the christmas buying season, and this year will be more heated than ever.
Microsoft announced its release plans earlier than Sony, but it's actually Sony that has let the most information slip.
Microsoft's Xbox One is highly likely to arrive within a week or two of this date too.
There is some suggestion that it may be the other way around, though. Toys 'R' Us has said that the Xbox One will arrive on 29 November, two weeks before the Sony PS4. It seems unlikely that the Sony console would touch down this close to Christmas, though - the commercial costs of such a move could be great.
As well as potentially arriving a little earlier, the Sony PS4 also benefits from being cheaper. It costs £349.99 while the Xbox One costs £429 - a disparity of £80.
The price difference has earnt Microsoft much criticsm, but it's an easy issue to explain away. The Xbox One comes with a Kinect sensor, which is needed to make the console function. Current-gen Kinect costs around £100, and as the next generation model is much more advanced, it accounts for the entire price difference.
Xbox One vs Sony PS4 – Design
PS4 – Slanted design, 2.8kg
The Xbox One and PS4 are completely different prospects bodywork-wise. Microsoft’s Xbox One is far, far larger – an imposing black monolith of the living room. The PS4 is sleeker, slimmer and less likely to dominate your under-TV space.
Both keep the severe, black and masculine style that’s common to games consoles, though.
This picture demonstrates the size difference very well.
Why the extra size in the Xbox One? It’s likely that part of the internal volume of the Xbox One’s case is there to aid cooling. Overheating was a significant problem in the Xbox 360, responsible for causing many of the red ring issues that plagued the console’s earlier years.
Xbox One vs PS4 - Key Exclusive Games
Many of the best upcoming games for the next-generation consoles are not exclusives. Bungie's Destiny, Battlefield 4, Assassin's Creed IV and many others will arrive for both systems. And as the consoles use the same processor architecture, porting between the two should be fairly easy.
However, it's the games that won't come to both consoles that should affect your buying decision - Xbox or PlayStation? Although the PS4 will reportedly have more exclusives within its first year, we actually know about more Xbox One exclusive games at present. Here's the run-down.
Xbox One Exclusives
Halo 5What is it? The next-gen instalment of the key Xbox game series – an extra-terrestrial first-person shooter.
Dead Rising 3
What is it? Zombies, zombies, zombies. A third-person action adventure. It’s darker than the previous games and is set in an open-world environment rather than a hemmed-in mall.
Forza Motorsport 5
What is it? The Xbox’s answer to Gran Turismo. A half-serious driving game with hundreds of cars and beautiful visuals.
TitanFall
What is it? A first-person multiplayer shooter from the old heads of the development team that made Call of Duty: Modern Warfare (Infinity Ward.)
Killer Instinct
What is it? A one-on-one fighter resurrected from the 16-bit days of gaming. Think Mortal Kombat with even weirder characters.
Sunset Overdrive
What is it? A colourful mutant-filled action game with a world reminiscent of Jet Set Radio – but packed with zombies. Made by Insomniac games.
Ryse
What is it? A brutal first-person melee action title from Crytek, the maker of the Far Cry and Crysis games.
Project Spark
What is it? A ‘game making’ game that’s comparable in many respects to Sony’s LittleBigPlanet.
Quantum Break
What is it? An action-packed shooter in which you can manipulate time. Here’s hoping it’s better than the current-gen Timeshift.
Below
What is it? An artsy-looking indie adventure from the maker of Sword and Sworcery.
PS4 Exclusives
Drive ClubWhat is it? A racer that’s out to take on Forza Motorsport 5 with a more arcade-like take on racing.
Killzone: Shadowfall
What is it? A gorgeous-but-grim first-person shooter, continuing the PlayStation-exclusive series.
Infamous: Second Son
What is it? The third large-scale Infamous game, in which you play as a man with superpowers.
Knack
What is it? A bright and breezy third-person action-adventure, and one of the most family-friendly launch titles.
Octodad: Deadliest Catch
What is it? A bonkers indie game in which you play as an octopus.
The Order: 1886
What is it? An action game set in Victorian London.
Read, our round-up of the best Xbox One games and best PS4 games to look out for
Xbox One vs PS4 - DRM Policies
Until recently, it was thought that the Xbox One would take an aggressive and novel approach to games DRM - digital rights management. This is the copy protection uses to try and combat piracy.When the Xbox One was first announced, and at its E3 showing, we believed the console would need to connect to the internet regularly in order to function. The positive side of this is that you would no longer need a game disc to play a game - making the Xbox One a jukebox of instantly-playable installed games.
Sounds good, eh? There were several negatives to this approach.
Games rental was thrown out the window, as was free sharing of game discs between friends. Games trade-ins were to be limited to approved partners too - sure to make games retailers a bit anxious.
This caused a huge backlash among gamers, especailly as the Sony PS4 is to use a more traditional disc-based approach to its anti-piracy measures - with no need for an online check-in.
On 19 June, Xbox's Don Mattrick wrote on the Xbox blog that the online check-in is to be scrapped. You will no longer need internet access to play an Xbox One. But you will need to have the disc in the drive in order to play a game, and although downloadable versions are available as well as the disc type, these can't be shared among friends at all.
Sony never had any plans - that we know of - to use an aggressive anti-piracy DRM system. While there are sure to be downloadable updates for games, you won't need to have internet access to play a disc-based game with the PS4. Unless it's an online-only multiplayer game of course.
Therefore, the Xbox One and PS4 will function much as the PS3 and Xbox 360 do today.
Commercially, the biggest impact this will have is in allowing the second-hand games market to function just as it does now. It'll be up to the games publishers to introduce ways to dissuade buyers from purchasing used games - most likely by offering one-use unlock codes that give access to additional content in the boxes of new games.
Xbox One vs Sony PS4 –Graphics
A key question for any head-to-head in the games world is - which has better graphics? It is a question that is, and will probably always be, very difficult to impossible to answer.
As with the current Xbox 360 vs PS3 battle, which console has prettier graphics will vary from game-to-game, and generally the difference is not that great. It's all down to the way games are made.
A developer produces a game for a 'lead sku', the core platform that it decides to create the building blocks of a game on. That game is then ported over to the other platforms it is to be released on.
Of course, with a project that's as big a deal as an AAA console game, work will happen on the Xbox One and PS4 versions simultaneously.
The one way to guess at which console has the greater graphics potential is to look at what is going on under the hood - checking out the CPU, the GPU and the core system memory that run the show.
Xbox One vs Sony PS4 – CPU
Xbox One – AMD 8-core Jaguar CPUPS4 - AMD 8-core Jaguar CPU
The next Xbox and PS4 use extremely similar CPUs, made by AMD. Both use an APU setup, which links together both CPU and GPU into one package.
They’re 8–core chips using ‘Jaguar’ cores – a term picked by their maker AMD to denote their chipset generation. Although it’s yet to be officially confirmed, the PS4 chipset is expected to be clocked slightly higher than the Xbox’s at 2GHz rather than 1.6GHz.
The difference in core processor power isn’t likely to be that great, though, and that both consoles use x86 architecture will make life much easier for developers – simplifying the porting process.
Xbox One vs Sony PS4 – GPU and RAM
Xbox One – Comparable to Radeon HD 7000-series, 8GB DDR3 RAM with 32MB eSRAMPS4 - Comparable to Radeon HD 7000-series, 8GB GDDR5 RAM
The PS4 and Xbox One both use an APU processor that combines the CPU and GPU into a single unit. And both are made by AMD.
Having extra processing power will let the PS4 perform more tasks simultaneously – which should in theory allow for more impressive visual effects.
A more impressive GPU is matched with more impressive-sounding RAM. The PS4 uses GDDR5 RAM, while the Xbox One has more conventional DDR3 memory – and both have 8GB of the stuff.
GDDR5 has much higher bandwidth than DDR3, designed for intensive applications such as in graphics cards, while DDR3 is ‘bog standard’ system memory.
If DDR3 was all the Xbox One had, it’d be in serious trouble. But it also has an eSRAM buffer that should help to bridge the 100GB/sec bandwidth gap between the two RAM types. It has a 32MB chunk of eSRAM that will function as a frame buffer.
The question is – will it really mitigate the speed gap between DDR3 and GDDR5? We’ll have to wait to see what the game devs working with the hardware say.
Read our full strip-down of the Xbox One and PS4 graphics hardware
With a more powerful GPU and, seemingly, faster memory, the PS4 is clearly out in front on graphical specs.
Quite what level their power is at is a point of contention, though. Many have compared the consoles to the 7000-series cards from AMD, which tend to cost around £150 with 2GB of memory on-board.
However, EA’s chief technology officer Rajat Teneja claims that the consoles are a whole generation ahead of the top-end PCs on the market. To some that’ll seem like a ridiculous statement when top-end gaming PCs cost thousands of pounds, and these consoles will cost a few hundred.
What’s less contentious is that the Xbox One and PS4 are around 8-10 times as powerful as the previous-gen Xbox 360 and PS3. However, let’s not forget that an increase in graphical fidelity requires an exponential increase in power – so we won’t be looking at games that look 8-10 times as good.
But you can bet they will look a ‘whole lot’ better.
Xbox One vs Sony PS4 – Motion Control
Xbox One – Mandatory Kinect (2.0)PS4 – PlayStation Move
Microsoft has thoroughly re-worked motion sensor Kinect for the next-generation Xbox One. It’s now a mandatory part of the Xbox experience, and comes bundled with the console.
Xbox One Kinect, previously dubbed Kinect 2.0, is also much higher-fidelity. It uses 1080p cameras where the first-generation Kinect has a much lower-res VGA sensor. Even budget phones use higher-res cameras than that.
The new Kinect also uses an IR sensor to more reliably discern depth of its view field – making it much more accurate at judging the distance between the Kinect and objects.
Its field of view is also much larger, making it easier to setup and use. Kinect is programmed to discern all joint movement, and even separates thumbs from your fingers. It’s far more powerful than the Xbox 360’s Kinect.
The PS4 stays using Move, the motion control system used by the PS3. However, Move is now built into the controller.
There’s a move light on its back, used by the PS4 console to judge its position, while harvesting accelerometer data from the controller’s insides for higher-fidelity motion-sensing.
Sony does have an additional bit of tech that provides more Kinect-like features, the PS4 camera. Like Kinect, it's a camera 'bar' that will sit by your TV. The plan was reportedly to include this with the console as standard, but Sony backtracked when it realised it could beat the Xbox One on price by not including it.
The PS4 camera costs £50 so would have substantially increased the cost of the console. However, it's not a mandatory part of the PS4 experience, where Kinect is with the Xbox One.
Read more about upcoming next-gen games
Xbox One vs Sony PS4 – TV and Multimedia
Xbox One – HDMI pass-thru for TV operation, streaming services inc. NetflixPS4 - Streaming services inc. Netflix, LoveFilm
Both consoles will offer a wide array of streaming services at, or just after, launch. Their US launched flaunted a bunch of familiar logos, suggesting among these we’d see Netflix and Hulu – the two biggest streaming services stateside.
Having Netflix is a big boon for us in the UK too, but we’re just as concerned with getting BBC iPlayer, 4OD, LoveFilm, Demand 5 and ITV Player. These UK-centric services are yet to be confirmed by either manufacturer, but as most feature in the current-gen consoles, their appearance in the next batch is only likely to be down to sluggish moves by the respective TV/streaming operators.
To date, Sony has been much quicker at adopting these new services. However at present Sky’s services are available through the Xbox 360, and not the PS3. No Sky deals with the next-generation consoles have been announced, yet.
The Xbox One’s big multimedia win is the use of HDMI pass-thru with ARC to let the console control your television. At the console’s launch Microsoft showed off asking your console to search for TV programmes using the Kinect’s voice recognition.
However, some of the Xbox One’s TV functionality will not be in the UK – at launch. Microsoft’s idea is that the Xbox One will become the centre of the living room, by making you do your TV watching through the console.
The Xbox One's media services will also require a subscription to Xbox Live. Netflix, LoveFilm and even the TV control feature will also demand an Xbox Live Gold account. This costs around £40 a year, although shop around and you'll find a year's subscription for around £30.
Sony has confirmed that you will not need a subscription to PlayStation Plus to access video streaming services on the PS4. PlayStation Plus is Sony's Xbox Live Golf equivalent.
Find out where you can place an Xbox One pre-order
Xbox One vs Sony PS4 – Optical drive
Xbox One – Blu-rayPS4 – Blu-ray
In the previous generation of consoles, the PS3 went for Blu-ray and the Xbox 360 dipped a toe in the HD DVD water, with an optional HD DVD player accessory. The HD DVD format died a death, although thanks to the relatively small storage needed by this generation’s games, it could make do with DVD.
For this generation, DVDs won’t be good enough. Unless we’re going to start having games with 10 discs.
Some have suggested that this generation’s consoles will do without optical drives, this is premature. Both consoles use a Blu-ray drive, with discs capable of storing up to 50GB a piece.
Xbox One vs Sony PS4 – Controller
Xbox One – Minor re-design, Kinect redesign
PS4 – Moderate re-design, integrated Move
Sony has given the Sixaxis a fairly significant redesign with the PS4. There’s now a lot more control packed into the pad’s body, with a trackpad that sits between the D-pad and the buttons.
There’s also a Move light on the controller’s rear, letting it function like the Move motion control ‘sticks’ available today. The final – slight - change in direction comes with the share button, which lets you quickly share moments of gameplay.
There are some pretty serious changes here, but it shouldn’t feel too different in the hand. The controller’s shape is much the same as the current-model.
The Xbox One controller is a lot closer to the current edition, but Microsoft does claim that more than 40 improvements have been made. What's new?
Most of the changes relate to ergonomics, but the new controller also has an integrated battery compartment, Wi-Fi Direct and new triggers
Read more at http://www.trustedreviews.com/opinions/xbox-one-vs-sony-ps4#6l0DJEfAmrekcx5o.99
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