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If you want to believe it'll be a $700+ console sure. I however think it'll be a $450 at most console. It won't be more than 20GB at that price.
 
Why would a few GBs of GDDR6 increase the price by hundreds? It was about 10USD per 1GB chip for low quantity orders at the start of the year and that's usually about 30% more than the wholesale price, but consoles usually get particularly good deals on hardware because they're guaranteed long term sources of baseline income for the manufacturers, it'd probably increase the BOM cost by at most $50 to use 24GB rather than 16GB GDDR6 if it wasn't absolute top speed stuff, and that's not accounting for the fact they could just set 4GB as cheaper non-unified DDR4 for system/CPU only tasks building on the PS4pro if the extra memory controller logic was worth the cost reduction.

Goat of Duty(Goat deathmatch game) is having a closed beta this weekend https://www.pcgamer.com/goat-of-duty-is-call-of-duty-but-with-goats/
 
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Sure it cost $10USD per chip for the slowest and cheapest solution
$10x24GB. $240 on memory alone. Not going to happen.

All that math is based off the 8Gb stacks. It's more for the full 16Gb stacks from Samsung. It will have to be 16Gb stacks for space concerns for a console. It would probably be around $200 for memory accounting for volume sales and whatever else they do.

One 16Gb is 2GB of memory if its $20 per stack and you want 24GB. Well $20x12 is $240. Take that discount and whatever else and it's probably around $180-200 depending on the deal struck. That's quite an investment. Add in all the custom R&D for the CPU, GPU, OS development, integrating a unified memory structure, Wifi/Ethernet, blu-ray player, casing, fans, custom cooling solution, motherboard designs, and whatever else they add it really doesn't give much room for a sub $500 price point. Nearly half the cost is for memory, which the console won't even be able to use to it's full extent with the power it has. It's more than needed. Devs would end up using it mostly as a cache as it would take forever before they can properly utilize such a vast amount of ram where it's actually needed. Even modern games using the latest and greatest tech won't consume more than 10GB. On a platform where you can efficiently use memory, 12-18GB is a vast amount.
 
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No one actually pays that though beyond 2000 chips(Ultra low volume). Those prices are about 30% over no deal wholesale price. They'll pay far closer to 5USD per GB and decreasing sharply over time like with their GDDR5 supply. Basically the BOM cost of the memory is probably about $125, which is in the same ballpark as the last consoles. Remember the PS4 sold only slightly in the black. ~$380 manufacturing cost and $399 rrp, around a quarter of which was spent on memory. If it's mixed, 18GB GDDR6 + 6GB DDR4 or similar, that could bring costs down even further.

Many modern games can use more than 10gb on the GPU alone at 4K, and that's without raytracing. If this was a 1080p console then sure I'd agree with you, but modern 4K games are already being strained under 8GB VRAM limits and RT can double memory use.

Current gen games have to absolutely abuse the HDD because of all the streaming to main memory that has to occur with modern world sizes and in some case it becomes a hard limiter on in game movement speed or similar.
 
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I have a feeling this console is going to be $600+.

Given the hardware it packs if the rumours are true? I think that could be somewhat of a bargain.
 
I think they could do $500, for the PS4 the estimated BOM cost on launch was about $188 for DRAM + APU, $37 for the HDD and $123 for everything else (PSU, motherboard, cooling, optical drive, ect), for about $340 without controller & accessories, if they spent 50% more on the APU + DRAM + HDD, so about $340 for those parts, then even if everything else was still $123(Which they won't be given all the hardware revisions the PS4 has had across botth shells to reduce costs) they'd still have room left over for accessories and make a similar margin on the early hardware and a guaranteed growing margin over time with room for price cuts, because the supply deals with AMD are usually front-loaded (AMD makes more profit on the console than Sony early in the sales cycle but this margin tapers off).
 
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I think the next consoles will be somewhere between the £500 to £650 range, any higher than that, I think will push a lot more people to the PC as for not much more you can get a PC that will match the performance of the consoles but offer so much more potential.
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/technology-48214293

U.S might be banning loot boxes and microtransactions. I hope they do and the rest of the world follows suit to destroy this blight
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/technology-48214293

U.S might be banning loot boxes and microtransactions. I hope they do and the rest of the world follows suit to destroy this blight


The publishers who push all this toxic micro transaction and loot box poison will find another way to push their BS, They'll end up calling them "small downloadable content" or some such non sense.
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/technology-48214293

U.S might be banning loot boxes and microtransactions. I hope they do and the rest of the world follows suit to destroy this blight

Loot boxes maybe, but I dont they will win with microtransactions. Its not gambling after all.

Big publishers will probably lobby together and say that removing MT will result in mass scale layoffs.
 
Anandtech have done a big piece on whether the famed 2600K still holds up, some results:
2600K OC vs 9700K

4K Gaming: 2% improvement
1440p gaming : 9% improvement
1080p gaming: 26% improvement (Worth noting this is generally already above 150fps)
Most general tasks average a ~50% improvement
Most productivity tasks are around 100% improvement.

https://www.anandtech.com/show/1404...core-i7-2600k-testing-sandy-bridge-in-2019/21

It is worth noting that this is with a GTX 1080, so there is likely a larger gap when higher-end GPUs are used like the RTX 2080 Ti, Radeon VII and GTX 1080 Ti.
 
Yeah I think the increased call rate & memory transfers with DXR/RTX enabled would also increase CPU load a fair bit, but then I'm not sure someone would still be holding onto their nearing 10 year old £150 CPU while buying a £700+ GPU(Who knows tho), think this is more for those looking at ~£100-£200 upgrade cycles
 
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Yeah I think the increased call rate & memory transfers with DXR/RTX enabled would also increase CPU load a fair bit, but then I'm not sure someone would still be holding onto their nearing 10 year old £150 CPU while buying a £700+ GPU(Who knows tho), think this is more for those looking at ~£100-£200 upgrade cycles

You are right there, just clarifying things as your original post does not say what GPU was used.
 
https://news.microsoft.com/2019/05/16/sony-and-microsoft-to-explore-strategic-partnership/

Sony and Microsoft announced on Thursday that the two companies will partner on new innovations to enhance customer experiences in their direct-to-consumer entertainment platforms and AI solutions.

From the sounds of it, essentially Sony will be leveraging Microsoft's Azure (Probably the best cloud platform for gaming with its distribution) for some of their/PlayStation services, while MS wants to get their AI technology in a range of Sony hardware, and the former probably helps a lot with integrating the latter.

CEO of Sony said:
“PlayStation® itself came about through the integration of creativity and technology. Our mission is to seamlessly evolve this platform as one that continues to deliver the best and most immersive entertainment experiences, together with a cloud environment that ensures the best possible experience, anytime, anywhere. For many years, Microsoft has been a key business partner for us, though of course the two companies have also been competing in some areas. I believe that our joint development of future cloud solutions will contribute greatly to the advancement of interactive content. Additionally, I hope that in the areas of semiconductors and AI, leveraging each company’s cutting-edge technology in a mutually complementary way will lead to the creation of new value for society.”
 
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