What To Expect From Next-gen Games

NVMe SSDs can easily be 50 times faster than hard drives for sequential reads and thousands of times faster for random reads. It stands to reason that game developers should be able to do things differently when they no longer need to target slow hard drives and can rely on fast storage. Workarounds for slow hard drive performance can be discarded, and new ideas and features that would never work on hard drives can be tried out. Microsoft and Sony are in pretty close agreement about what this will mean for the upcoming console generation, and they've touted most of the same benefits for end users.

Most of the game design changes enabled by abandoning hard drives will have little impact on the gaming experience from one second to the next; removing workarounds for slow storage won't do much to help frames per second, but it will remove some other pain points in the overall console experience. For starters, solid state drives can tolerate a high degree of fragmentation with no noticeable performance impact, so game files don't need to be defragmented after updates. Defragmentation is something most PC users no longer need to give even a passing thought, but it's still an occasionally necessary (albeit automatic) maintenance process on current consoles.


Not as obsolete as you might have thought. But soon.

Since game developers no longer need to care so much about maintaining spatial locality of data on disk, it will also no longer be necessary for data that's reused in several parts of a game to be duplicated on several parts of the disk. Commonly re-used sounds, textures and models will only need to be included once in a game's files. This will have at least a tiny effect on slowing the growth of game install sizes, but it probably won't actually reverse that trend except where a studio has been greatly abusing the copy and paste features in their level editors.


Clone tool abuse

Warnings to not turn off the console while a game is saving first showed up when consoles moved away from cartridges with built-in solid state storage, and those warnings continue to be a hallmark of many console games and half-assed PC ports. The write speeds of SSDs are fast enough that saving a game takes much less time than reaching for a power switch, so ideally those warnings should be reduced, if not gone for good.


How to spot a console port

But NVMe SSDs have write speeds that go far beyond even that requirement, and that allows changes in how games are saved. Instead of summarizing the player's progress in a file that is mere megabytes, new consoles will have the freedom to dump gigabytes of data to disk. All of the RAM used by a game can be saved to a NVMe SSD in a matter of seconds, like the save state features common to console emulators. If the static assets (textures, sounds, etc.) that are unmodified are excluded from the save file, we're back down to near instant save operations. But now the save file and in-use game assets can be simply read back into RAM to resume the whole game state in no more than a second or two, bypassing all the usual start-up and load work done by games.


Xbox Series X Quick Resume menu

The deduplication of game assets is a benefit that will trivially carry over to PC ports, and the lack of defragmentation is something PC gamers with SSDs have already been enjoying for years—and neither of those changes requires a cutting edge SSD. The instant save and resume capabilities can work just fine (albeit not quite so "instant") on even a SATA SSD, but implementing this well requires a bit of help from the operating system, so it may be a while before this feature becomes commonplace on PC games. (Desktop operating systems have long supported hibernate and restore of the entire OS image, but doing it per-application is unusual.)

But those are all pretty much convenience features that do not make the core game experience itself any richer. The reduction or elimination of loading screens be a welcome improvement for many games—but many more games have already gone to great lengths to eliminate loading screens as much as possible. This most often takes the form of level design that obscures what would have been a loading screen. The player's movement and field of view are temporarily constrained, drastically reducing the assets that need to stay in RAM and allowing everything else to be swapped out, while retaining some illusion of player freedom. Narrow hallways and canyons, elevator and train rides, and airlocks—frequently one-way trips—are all standard game design elements to make it less obvious where a game world is divided.


Level design for 64MB of RAM

Open-world games get by with fewer such design elements by making the world less detailed and restricting player movement speed so that no matter where the player chooses to move, the necessary assets can be streamed into RAM on the fly. With a fast SSD, game designers and players will both have more freedom. But some transition sequences will still be required for major scene changes. The consoles cannot reload the entire contents of RAM from one frame to the next; that will still take several seconds.

SSD As RAM?

Finally, we come to what may be the most significant consequence of making SSDs standard and required for games, but is also the most overstated benefit: Both Microsoft and Sony have made statements along the lines of saying that the SSD can be used almost like RAM. Whatever qualifiers and caveats those statement came with quickly get dropped by fans and even some press. So let's be clear here: the console SSDs are no substitute for RAM. The PS5's SSD can supply data at 5.5 GB/s. The RAM runs at 448 GB/s, *81 times faster*. The consoles have 16 GB of GDDR6 memory. If a game needs to use more than 16 GB to render a scene, framerates will drop down to Myst levels because the SSD is not fast enough. The SSDs are inadequate in both throughput and latency.

It's certainly possible for a level to use more than 16GB of assets, but not all on screen at once. The technical term here is working set: how much memory is really being actively used at once. What the SSD changes somewhat is the threshold for what can be considered active. With a fast SSD, the assets that need to be kept in DRAM aren't much more than what's currently on screen, and the game doesn't need to prefetch very far ahead. Textures for an object in the same room but currently off-screen may be safe to leave on disk until the camera starts moving in that direction, whereas a hard drive based system will probably need to keep assets for the entire room and adjacent rooms in RAM to avoid stuttering. This difference means an SSD-based console (especially with NVMe performance) can free up some VRAM and allow for some higher-resolution assets. It's not a huge change; it's not like the SSD increases effective VRAM size by tens of GBs, but it is very plausible that it allows games to use an extra few GB of RAM for on-screen content rather than prefetching off-screen assets. Mark Cerny has approximated it as saying the game now only needs to pre-fetch about a second ahead, rather than about 30 seconds ahead.


(Not to scale)

There's another layer to this benefit: partially resident textures has been possible on other platforms, but becomes more powerful now. What was originally developed for multi-acre ground textures can now be effectively used on much smaller objects. Sampler feedback allows the GPU to provide the application with more detailed and accurate information about which portions of a texture are actually being displayed. The game can use that information to only issue SSD read requests for those portions of the file. This can be done with a granularity of 128kB blocks of the (uncompressed) texture, which is small enough to allow for meaningful RAM savings by not loading texels that won't be used, while at the same time still issuing SSD reads that are large enough to be a good fit for SSD performance characteristics.

Microsoft has stated that these capabilities add up to the effect of a 2x or 3x multiplier of RAM capacity and SSD bandwidth. I'm not convinced. Sure, a lot of SSD bandwidth can be saved over short timescales by incrementally loading a scene. But I doubt these features will allow the Series X with its ~10GB of VRAM to handle the kind of detailed scenery you could draw on a PC GPU with 24GB of VRAM. They're welcome to prove me wrong, though.

Balancing the System: Other Hardware Features What's Necessary to Get Full Performance Out of a Solid State Drive?
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  • surt - Friday, June 12, 2020 - link

    They could, but the point is that developers can't rely on it.
  • Tams80 - Friday, June 12, 2020 - link

    The whole point of a new 'generation' is that the baseline is reset. Consumers (partly for their own good) are expected to buy a new console, so developers will know that that one will be what millions of people will have.

    Mid-life upgrades work to an extent, but limiting games to just the newer models while the old models are still 'current' greatly reduces the potential market. They do work for making existing features better, but new or different features just aren't going to be worth investing in for most developers.
  • close - Sunday, June 14, 2020 - link

    The current generation of consoles made some pretty massive changes mid-cycle, compared to any older gen. The most obvious one being that only some of them support 4K. And yet all games just work. There's no "limiting games to just the newer models".

    Having a faster SSD just means some games will have an even shorter load time (you'll spend even less time in that weird elevator that just happened to be in the middle of the level). At worst devs will have a check on the type of console they run and skip a certain transition completely if they run on the faster SSD.
  • khanikun - Sunday, June 14, 2020 - link

    Mid-cycle upgrades just puts consoles closer to that of PCs. Where you can change quality settings lower or higher to meet the hardware. Unlike PCs with tons of different options to change to match up with all the different hardware on the market, on consoles, you'll just end up having a few canned settings.

    The game will detect what console your on, what resolution your tv is, and whether it has hdr or not, then give you one of it's canned settings. With most games being multiplatform, the ability is already built in, they simply don't give you the option to actually change it on your own.

    You'll also have the console manufacturers require devs to do it. Like when Sony released the PS4 Pro, it required game devs to make the game playable on the PS4 and PS4 Pro.
  • close - Tuesday, June 16, 2020 - link

    > You'll also have the console manufacturers require devs to do it

    No consumer cares.
  • close - Friday, June 12, 2020 - link

    @ToTTenTranz, why exactly would the software compression used influence what the raw performance of the underlying hardware can be? They can keep using that AND double the performance of the SSD and/or interface.

    Right now it's hard to tell even if the SSD itself is the limit or something else like not enough PCIe lanes. If it's the SSD they could simply launch say a 2TB model that's twice as fast in a year, when SSD prices go down a bit more. If it's more than just the SSD then a mid cycle refresh could address this.
  • DigitalFreak - Friday, June 12, 2020 - link

    The only SSD we know of so far that will meet that criteria is the EVO 980 Pro - 6500 MB/s. Based on the 970 Pro pricing, a 2TB 980 Pro will likely be between $600 - $700.
  • Billy Tallis - Friday, June 12, 2020 - link

    All the current consumer PCIe 4 drives that use the Phison E16 are going to get successors using the Phison E18 to hit ~7 GB/s. Brands using Silicon Motion controllers will be introducing drives using SM2264 to hit ~7 GB/s. ADATA in their usual fashion will have multiple drives in the ~7 GB/s range (SM2264 and IG5236 to start). By the end of the year or slightly later, the market segment of "faster than PS5" SSDs will be downright crowded.
  • DigitalFreak - Friday, June 12, 2020 - link

    Good to know. It would be nice to see the NVMe price premium disappear.
  • ikjadoon - Friday, June 12, 2020 - link

    That makes sense. It's confusing how Anandtech arrived at this conclusion, then:

    >In the PC and server space, the NVMe WRR command arbitration feature has been largely ignored by drive manufacturers and OS vendors—a partial survey of our consumer NVMe SSD collection only turned up two brands that have enabled this feature on their drives. So when it comes to supporting third-party SSD upgrades, Sony cannot depend on using the WRR command arbitration feature.

    The PS5 will sell 100x to 1000x more units than a laptops/desktops that have a spare PCIe 4.0 slot. Why *wouldn't* SSD manufacturers fill this void with glee?

    1. You get a captive market of hundreds of millions, who absolutely gobbles up hundreds of GBs.
    2. You get to charge a pretty price.
    3. Way, way, way more people will buy NVMe SSDs for PS5 versus any laptop / desktop that even has a spare PCIe 4.0 slot!

    Though perhaps Sony doesn't like the "weighted" part of WRR.

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