Image Quality - Xbox One vs. PlayStation 4

This is the big one. We’ve already established that the PS4 has more GPU performance under the hood, but how does that delta manifest in games? My guess is we’re going to see two different situations. The first being what we have here today. For the most part I haven’t noticed huge differences in frame rate between Xbox One and PS4 versions of the same game, but I have noticed appreciable differences in resolution/AA. This could very well be the One’s ROP limitations coming into play. Quality per pixel seems roughly equivalent across consoles, the PS4 just has an easier time delivering more of those pixels.

The second situation could be one where an eager developer puts the PS4’s hardware to use and creates a game that doesn’t scale (exclusively) in resolution, but also in other aspects of image quality as well. My guess is the types of titles to fall into this second category will end up being PS4 exclusives (e.g. Uncharted 4) rather than something that’s cross-platform. There’s little motivation for a cross-platform developer to spend a substantial amount of time in optimizing for one console.

Call of Duty: Ghosts

Let’s start out with Call of Duty: Ghosts. Here I’m going to focus on two scenes: what we’ve been calling internally Let the Dog Drive, and the aliasing test. Once again I wasn’t able to completely normalize black levels across both consoles in Ghosts for some reason.

In motion both consoles look pretty good. You really start to see the PS4’s resolution/AA advantages at the very end of the sequence though (PS4 image sample, Xbox One image sample). The difference between these two obviously isn’t as great as from the 360 to Xbox One, but there is a definite resolution advantage to the PS4. It’s even more obvious if you look at our aliasing test:

Image quality otherwise looks comparable between the two consoles.

NBA 2K14

NBA 2K14 is one cross platform title where I swear I could sense slight frame rate differences between the two consoles (during high quality replays) but it’s not something I managed to capture on video. Once again we find ourselves in a situation where there is a difference in resolution and/or AA levels between the Xbox One and PS4 versions of the game.

Both versions look great. I’m not sure how much of this is the next-gen consoles since the last time I played an NBA 2K game was back when I was in college, but man have console basketball games significantly improved in their realism over the past decade. On a side note, NBA 2K14 does seem to make good use of the impulse triggers on the Xbox One’s controller.



Battlefield 4

I grabbed a couple of scenes from early on in Battlefield 4. Once again the differences here are almost entirely limited to the amount of aliasing in the scene as far as I can tell. The Xbox One version is definitely more distracting. In practice I notice the difference in resolution, but it’s never enough to force me to pick one platform over another. I’m personally more comfortable with the Xbox One’s controller than the PS4’s, which makes for an interesting set of tradeoffs.

Image Quality - Xbox 360 vs. Xbox One Power Consumption
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  • dillingerdan - Wednesday, November 20, 2013 - link

    I know it might be due to constraints right now, but can you test power consumption when being used for passing TV through? I would like to know how viable an option that is, considering you need 3 pieces of electronics for it to run (TV, Xbox One and "Cable box"). I'm guessing its going to be similar to idle consumption... Which, if it is, is WAY too high just to add a bit of voice control/fantasy sports overlay. Just a pity they didn't integrate a similar experience into the Media Centre part of windows.
  • brickmaster32000 - Saturday, November 23, 2013 - link

    Worrying about power consumption, especially just as it passes cable though, is really just looking for problems. If the added cost from power is going to be ridiculously small and if its really a concern you would be better off ditching cable for things like Netflix and if you are actually worried about the generation of the power you would save more power by just watching one less show every day..
  • Spunjji - Tuesday, November 26, 2013 - link

    I would say that it's not, really. They're advertising this as a useful feature, but if it's adding 50% to your overall TV watching power draw that's a pretty significant concern from various perspectives.
  • brickmaster32000 - Tuesday, November 26, 2013 - link

    Lets be pessimistic and assume it actually did add 50% of the power draw, which it almost certainly isn't. From what I can find LCDs draw only around 70 watts which means your xbox would be drawing 35 watts. Even if you left your tv on 24/7 all year at th average that the EIA lists for this year of 12.07 cents per killowatt hour that only come up to $37.01. Thats a pathetic amount to be worrying about when you are about to drop $400 -500 just on a system to play games and then $60 per game. This is not a reasonable concern this is looking for faults to complain about.
  • tipoo - Wednesday, November 20, 2013 - link

    Will you be doing one for the PS4 Anand? And will there be a Maxi to this Mini review? :P

    Thanks
  • tipoo - Wednesday, November 20, 2013 - link

    Also, any guess on the Wii U shader count based off the die shot?

    http://www.conductunbecoming.ie/wp-content/uploads...
  • bill5 - Wednesday, November 20, 2013 - link

    protip, it's 160 shaders.

    wii u fans dont like this, but it is fact.
  • tipoo - Wednesday, November 20, 2013 - link

    I think so too. Also 8 ROPs and TMUs.
  • Wolfpup - Wednesday, November 20, 2013 - link

    160 is known for sure? And I assume this is...what, AMD's Direct X 10 part? I can barely remember what the norm was for that...
  • tipoo - Wednesday, November 20, 2013 - link

    Something like a Radeon 4600 series, yeah.

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