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Everything You Need To Know About The PS5

The PS5 is out now. Here's everything you need to know about your new console and how to set it up.

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Sony's PlayStation 5 is out now in many major markets, having released on November 12. There are two versions of the PS5 available to purchase--the high-end PS5 standard edition and the disc-less PS5 Digital. It's been hard enough for many to secure a preorder for any of the next-gen consoles, but keeping up with the barrage of information is an entirely new game. Between technical specs, backwards compatibility, storage questions and concerns, launch game lineup and exclusives, peripherals like the new DualSense controller and other accessories, there's a lot to keep up with--not to mention some of the pressing day-one troubleshooting questions. In this guide, we've gathered up everything you need to know about your new PS5 as well as some of the most popular questions and answers, to help you get your next-gen console up and running.

What Is PS5?

The PS5, or PlayStation 5, is part of the ninth generation of video game consoles, which includes the Nintendo Switch and Microsoft's Xbox Series X/S. It follows the PS4. Our review of the PS5 praises it as a big and bold next-gen machine.

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Now Playing: PS5 Launch Date, Price, & Games - Everything You Need To Know In Under 3 Minutes

When Does PS5 Come Out?

The PS5's release date is November 12, 2020 in many markets, including North America, Japan, Mexico, Australia, New Zealand, and South Korea. It'll expand to other regions on November 19.

How Much Does PS5 Cost?

The base PS5 costs $500 while the disc-less Digital edition costs $400.

Where Can I Buy PS5?

If you're looking to buy a PS5 on launch day, consult our order guide below for a full list of which retailers will have the PS5 available to order day one.

What's The Difference Between PS5 And PS5 Digital?

The key difference between the base PS5 and its digital edition is its disc drive. The high-end or default PS5 costs $500 and comes with a disc drive while the $400 digital version does not have a disc drive, meaning it can only install and play games via digital download. Picking between the two comes down to a few things, not just the convenience of using a disc or not. You should also consider whether or not you can afford or want to rely solely on the internet to play your games and how you feel about not technically "owning" the games physically.

There are a few other differences to be aware of as well. The base PS5 is larger and heavier than the digital PS5, but not by much. Head down to the section on technical specs for a more detailed breakdown.

What To Do Before Getting A PS5

If you're moving on from the PS4 to the PS5, there are a few things you should consider doing before setting up your PS5. If you have a PS4, that includes figuring out new storage solutions, double-checking login credentials, and backing up your game saves. You should also make sure to order any necessary adapters and clear out space to make way for your new console. Check out the guide below for more.

Can PS5 Play PS4 Games?

About 99% of PS4 games work on PS5, according to Sony, but PS3, PS2, and PS1 games are unfortunately excluded from its backwards compatibility. Some PS4 games will even receive next-gen upgrades via Game Boost, allowing them to take advantage of the new system's improved hardware. A special PS5 Plus Collection benefit will also be available to PS+ subscribers, granting them access to a number of the PS4's best games, including God of War, Bloodborne, and Persona 5.

How To Transfer Games From PS4 To PS5

The PS5 is backwards compatible with about 99% of PS4 games, according to Sony. If you need help transferring data from your PS4 to PS5, including games and save data, check out our guide below. We'll walk you through how to complete the process via external drives, plain old discs, or using one of the console's digital and cloud-based options.

How Much Storage Does PS5 Have?

  • 825GB (total)
  • 667GB (available)

The PS5 comes with a custom 825GB NVMe SSD, but if you account for the operating system and other default files and updates, you'll have about 667GB of storage left for games.

What Are The PS5's Technical Hardware Specs?

Consult the table below for a breakdown on the technical specs of both versions of the PS5, including the high-end standard edition and its digital-only counterpart.

PS5 Standard/Base Edition and Digital Edition Hardware Specs

Specs
CPU8x Zen 2 Cores at 3.5GHz (variable frequency)
GPU10.28 TFLOPs, 36 CUs at 2.23GHz (variable frequency)
GPU ArchitectureCustom RDNA 2
Memory/Interface16GB GDDR6/256-bit
Memory Bandwidth448GB/s
Internal StorageCustom 825GB SSD
IO Throughput5.5GB/s (Raw), Typical 8-9GB/s (Compressed)
Expandable StorageNVMe SSD Slot
External StorageUSB HDD Support
Optical Drive4K UHD Blu-ray Drive
DimensionsStandard: 15.4 in × 10.2 in × 4.1 in / Digital: 15.4 in × 10.2 in × 3.6 in
WeightStandard: 9.9 lb / Digital: 8.6 lb

What PS5 Accessories Are There?

Alongside the launch of the PS5 are several new peripherals and accessories, including the brand-new DualSense controller. Find a list of the available accessories and check out our PS5 order guide for a list of where to order them.

  • DualSense Wireless Controller
  • DualSense Charging Station
  • Pulse 3D Wireless Headset
  • HD Camera
  • Media Remote

What's So Special About The DualSense Controller?

The PS5's new controller is the DualSense, and it's required to play any PS5 games. It retains some of the DualShock 4's innovations, such as the touchpad, lightbar, and built-in speakers, but it introduces a number of new features. Those include an integrated mic (which is on by default), haptic feedback, and adaptive triggers. Haptic feedback allows for a more nuanced style of vibration that can more accurately reflect the in-game action. Adaptive triggers allow the triggers to also provide feedback, such as providing tension when drawing the string on a bow. When used effectively, it can be quite impressive, as you can read about below.

Do PS4 Controllers Work On PS5?

Yes, PS4 controllers work on PS5, but they can't be used to play PS5 games. A PS4 controller can navigate the system's menus and play backwards-compatible PS4 games, but you'll need the DualSense controller in order to play anything designed for PS5.

Does PS5 Come With Any Free Games?

Yes, all PS5 systems come with one free game pre-loaded: Astro's Playroom. While a standalone (albeit somewhat short) game in its own right, Astro's Playroom also serves as a demonstration of what the DualSense controller is capable of. Astro's Playroom can be removed from the system's internal SSD to free up space and can be re-downloaded for free.

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linadragonx

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If course it has backward comparability. Unless they flat out change every single api used and software to run games it is just largely going to be a spec bump and hardware redesign

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Ken_Mizuki

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Great article! It really says so much in detail. You guys might wanna check out what I have written on the upcoming playstation as well my article also has a lot of important things to know! https://www.techeazz.com/2019/08/ps5-coming-next-year.html

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ghost140

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$599 for the Standard PS5

$699-$749 for the (rumored) PS5 Pro

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Chubby170

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Soo, does that mean the ps5 will be backwards compatible with more than just ps4? Weird statement in the article.

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Yokai-Oni

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I already knew would be PS5 and im excited for PS5 <3

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videogameninja

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Personally, I think the big question that will determine just how well Sony’s latest creation sinks or takes flight will be… drumroll please… Price point.

-No surprise there, Ninja. Wow, you should be a fortune-teller.-

While the most amazing graphics, advancements in technology, and features will no doubt win over scores of gamers what will ultimately help make them put down their hard earned dough will be whether or not this tech comes at a price-point that seems reasonable or not.

Many hardware developers have been in this exact same spot with not so good results (Neo Geo anyone?) so saying price really doesn’t matter is setting oneself up for failure. Thankfully, I don’t think Sony is banking on this tactic as to do so might give up their market lead among the big 3 in terms of the amounts of consoles in gamers homes.

It goes without saying that exclusives/games will be another major driving factor for gamers looking at buying one of the next generation of consoles but Sony has been doing an amazing job since even the PS3 days so to think they will jump ship from their consistent delivering of great exclusives isn’t likely.

Sony might release the PS5 around the Christmas season in 2020 but if they were smart perhaps launching ahead of the NeXtbox might be in their best interest in terms of gaining market share as well.

Time will tell but one thing is for sure. 2020 is shaping up to be a bloodbath.

-CONSOLE WARS NINJA APPROVED-

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jenovaschilld

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@videogameninja: I do not think price point alone will determine success or not. IF we look back over the last 5 generations of consoles, prices have been all over the place. (launch prices) Multiple SKUs, etc included. And the ultimate winner of that gen or even that year is not totally tied to price. However there is always price per value, etc. etc. but even that has not proven solid. Going first or last doesn't mean to much either down the road.

But what does present more then anything, is that must have game or more importantly games within that first two years more then anything. Which you mentioned secondly. You can sale a console for less, but if it does not have the games consumers desire that effects sales of hardware - which really does not mean shit to platform providers. The most important thing they track is tie-in ratio or software sold per hardware. It doesn't matter if you sale a ton of hardware if no one is buying software -Take the Wii - sold a ton, had a very poor software to hardware - and that is how platforms make their money is through licensing fees.

For instance, even while the ps3 and xbox 1rst gen - did not sale very well in total numbers during their first 2yrs - their tie-in ratio was strong enough and money making enough to embolden their console companies. Of course the Dreamcast also had a high tie-in ratio but quickly died (that however was even more soap opera-ish and a great read).

If you google, wiki most successful consoles, and read down to the bottom, it talks about the 'razor and blade business model ' gaming industry - why a platform is considered successful and more. There are many factors - but it really boils down to - most all gaming consoles launch selling their machines subsidized or at a loss (sometimes by alot) but make their money and future by games sales. Many factors are considered to determine a winner- if that is a thing that can easily be explained. Price is not a solid factor.

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7rooper

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No surprise here... not even news here either!

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Ken_Mizuki

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Great article Gamespot! I have written an article on PS5 as well. You guys might wanna check it out :)

https://www.techeazz.com/2019/08/ps5-coming-next-year.html

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vaitko

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https://waitfeed.com/sony/sony-playstation-5/trending/news - good approach to keep up with PS5 latest updates

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Milestails2019

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@vaitko: it might not be called PlayStation 5

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vaitko

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@milestails2019: yeah, I know, but the we can only guess that name for now, so it's probably better to call it just Playstation 5 imho ;) what's really important regarding it, is that we are pretty sure that the next console are already in works!

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apoorve_katare

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Gamespot, you don't know the release date, price, exact specs, games to be release in PS5. Then why creating this article and putting it at headlines. Come on GameSpot, don't be a clickbaiter.

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DarknessR18

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Edited By DarknessR18

@apoorve_katare: Not only that, it's a rehashed article from 3 months ago. LMFAO!

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TJDMHEM

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is it a good console?

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Milestails2019

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@TJDMHEM: probably,but we don't if it's called PlayStation 5

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Mathilda

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Edited By Mathilda

Can't wait for Red Dead VR.

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Simba13

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I think AMD as a CPU maker would probably go bust if it weren't for the support of both MS and Sony in their consoles!

AMD must give them a really good deal on bulk purchasing of their chips. If console makers would bite the bullet and go with the far superior Intel multimode chips, then potential heat problems in the limited space of a console would probably be avoided, to say nothing about potential benefits in performance?

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IvanDavis

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@Simba13 said:

I think AMD as a CPU maker would probably go bust if it weren't for the support of both MS and Sony in their consoles!

AMD must give them a really good deal on bulk purchasing of their chips. If console makers would bite the bullet and go with the far superior Intel multimode chips, then potential heat problems in the limited space of a console would probably be avoided, to say nothing about potential benefits in performance?

At the time you posted this AMD had already came from behind and stole some of Intel's glory. Fast-forward to now and Intel has MAYBE 2-3 cpu's that are better than AMD's top CPU, but those CPU's are 50% more expensive for at most a 10-15% performance gain. When it comes to price to performance ratio Intel hasn't been able to touch AMD for awhile because AMD does the smart thing and targets the gaming population that are budget restricted.

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ScreamingSatori

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@Simba13: Have you ever tried playing a game using Intel graphics? They're at least a decade behind the capabilities of AMD or Nvidia graphics chips. You'd be lucky to get 30fps @ 1080p with Intel graphics, let alone 4k. If they used an Intel CPU, they'd still have to have an AMD or Nvidia graphics chip, which would jack up the price even further. The integrated AMD chips they're using have by far the best performance for the price. Now that they're being built on a 7nm process (lower than anything Intel offers), I doubt there will be any issues with heat.

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IvanDavis

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@screamingsatori said:

@Simba13: Have you ever tried playing a game using Intel graphics? They're at least a decade behind the capabilities of AMD or Nvidia graphics chips. You'd be lucky to get 30fps @ 1080p with Intel graphics, let alone 4k. If they used an Intel CPU, they'd still have to have an AMD or Nvidia graphics chip, which would jack up the price even further. The integrated AMD chips they're using have by far the best performance for the price. Now that they're being built on a 7nm process (lower than anything Intel offers), I doubt there will be any issues with heat.

You couldn't get much better than that even with AMD onboard graphics until this year with the Ryzen 5 3400g which averages 1080p@60-70fps on medium settings and 4k@20-25fps with everything on it's lowest settings. To compare Intels APU's with dedicated AMD and NVIDIA dedicated GPU's is like comparing apples to oranges. Even with an AMD CPU they need to use an AMD or nvidia graphics chip. The current consoles use a custom AMD jaguar CPU and a gpu chip equivalent to an AMD HD 7xxx series.

The new consoles still require a seperate GPU chip, especially with Sony's claim at 4k@120fps, which will only be remotely possible with extremely limited graphics quality. Realistically with what we know about AMD hardware I see the new consoles being 1080p@120fps, 4k@60fps, and MAYBE 8k@30fps

Neither Nvida nor AMD have a GPU that is capable of 4k@120fps

https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/amd-radeon-rx_5700-rx_5700_xt,6216-3.html

Even though AMD is now 7nm there are still heat issues to be concerned with when cramming everything in a small console case. The desktops with all 7nm AMD hardware are producing more heat than a console could ever possibly cool unless there was a breakthrough in the cost of liquid cooling. As it is now the harware has to be severely limited in performance to keep the TDP(totatl power draw) and heat manageable in a small console. This is the reason consoles use laptop components in them.

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pinkfloyd6789

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@Simba13: Consoles meant to be cheaper/

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Simba13

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@pinkfloyd6789: I just want a console to be GREAT, not just good. We have been expecting PS 5 for months and still have time to wait, so we have plenty of time to save up.

I can't wait to see PS 5 and will get one as soon as possible on release, now that we know we can still Play PS 4 games on it, so there will be no games drought on release.

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Reaper2rp

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Edited By Reaper2rp

I want to know if by "backwards compatible" if any PS4 games I bought on the PSN will play on the PS5 or if it will only take discs? I like going digital and I'd like to think all the cash I dropped on digital games would simply cross over to the PS5's PSN to play when ever I feel. It frustrated me that the digital PS3 games didn't cross over to PS4. I understand why the discs wouldn't but a game that is already on their servers... where is the difficulty in that?

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allever

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@reaper2rp: You must be confused. The reason the PS3 games didn't cross over to the PS4 is simply because the hardware on these consoles are very different. The PS3 is based on the Cell Engine and the PS4 is based on AMD. The games would need to be converted to the other hardware to be able to play on it.. And it wouldn't be worth it. The games wouldn't play the same and having to rewrite the games for the new console would be difficult.

The PS4 and PS5 are based on the AMD platform, so they already share the same architecture that makes it very easy to allow backward compatibility.

By the way, digital is mostly a form of communication. Digital, the games are downloaded to the console from the internet.. and disc-based the games are loaded to the console from disc. The game software are identical.

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luismur11

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The article says " It's possible it could handle 4K UHD Blu-Rays". I say, "it better does". 4k players play 1080p content so following that logic a console capable to play 8k disks should be able to play 4k disks. But I'm not an expert though.

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angrycreep

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@luismur11: 8K is just a marketing skin. 8K is strictly for video like movies. You not doing no gaming in here in 8K, unless you willing to play 8K games running at 2fps per second.

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jsprunk

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Playstation 4.25 Pro

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vice86

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why does it feel like its the same article over and over?

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murius

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BAsically saving money on the chip and balancing it out by maybe placing an SSD in it. There is no way they will put something big enough to support all the updates and digital downloads.

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Garbalen

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@murius: I would guess that they will do similar as with this gen and allow for customers to upgrade drive space either internally or externally. A USB 3.1 port, and speeds would be consistent either way.

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