I love my PlayStation 5, but I have no need for a PS5 Pro. The PS5 Pro was revealed in a technical showcase this week, announcing an underwheming set of specs, and a price worth revolting against. My response, though, was little more than a shrug of the shoulders.
The PS5 Pro has nothing to offer me; every new thing I learn about it only further cements my conviction that I don't need it. I may just be one player, but I suspect I'm not alone.
I snagged a PS5 pretty early in its shelf life — sometime in June 2021. I was one of the lucky few at that point, since, between a global chip shortage and a rampant scalping problem, it was functionally impossible to buy a PS5 until just recently. Those who did manage to get one had to either get excessively lucky when walking into a retail store, endlessly refresh Walmart or Amazon listings until they could add one to their cart, or wait for hours in virtual queues that didn't always secure them a place in line once orders did open up.
This bestselling game is available to play for free for Xbox and PS5 users, but hurry, because it's only free for one weekend.
These difficulties, along with the PS5's already exorbitant price, led to low sales in the earliest years of its release. As a result, many players opted to keep their PS4s, and it was only in the last couple of years that major releases (think, ) stopped releasing simultaneously on PS4, and went straight to PS5.
The chip shortage has definitively come to an end, but scalping is still a prevalent problem in almost every high-demand arena, from concert tickets to game consoles. If there really is a similar demand for the PS5 Pro, I don't need to go through the same process again.
Once I got my hands on a PS5, I vowed never to put that much effort into buying a console again, and game developers and publishers have already made it clear they'll support that decision. Although a handful of games will be PS5 Pro Enhanced, the upgraded console doesn't have any exclusive
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