Nah she naps in couchSo you can sneak out of bed and secretly play games, eh?
Both my monitor and PS5 give a similar beep when turned on. I try to sync both up and time a good cough to hide them.Nah she naps in couch
Just fart in sync with it, I'm sure she is conditioned to ignore that sound given how often she hears it.
2) Open your PS5 and desolder the buzzer from the motherboard. This speaker is a Murata Piezo buzzer, and it's pretty easy to desolder. Currently, the PS5 doesn't do any sort of software check to see if that component is actually present on the board, so once you do this you can turn your PS5 off and on anytime without making any noise. However - this is a bit risky if you don't know what you're doing, especially if you're not prepared to re-solder the buzzer back on in case Sony changes their mind about that software check in a future firmware upgrade.
I'm somewhat knowledgeable on this, since #2 above is exactly what I did. Though I was fixing another issue at the time and thought "Fuck it, this loud microwave buzzer is coming out!"
I'm somewhat knowledgeable on this, since #2 above is exactly what I did. Though I was fixing another issue at the time and thought "Fuck it, this loud microwave buzzer is coming out!"
You have two very impractical options to get rid of the noise:
1) If you connect remotely through the remote play app while your PlayStation 5 is in rest mode, it will turn on without beeping. This requires you to install the remote play app on your phone, connect it to your PlayStation - then disconnect from your local wifi, connect to your 4G or 5G cellular connection, then launch remote play and tell it to start your game. The system will turn on (without the beep) and from there you can kill the app and play with a regular controller on your TV.
2) Open your PS5 and desolder the buzzer from the motherboard. This speaker is a Murata Piezo buzzer, and it's pretty easy to desolder. Currently, the PS5 doesn't do any sort of software check to see if that component is actually present on the board, so once you do this you can turn your PS5 off and on anytime without making any noise. However - this is a bit risky if you don't know what you're doing, especially if you're not prepared to re-solder the buzzer back on in case Sony changes their mind about that software check in a future firmware upgrade.
2) Open your PS5 and desolder the buzzer from the motherboard. This speaker is a Murata Piezo buzzer, and it's pretty easy to desolder. Currently, the PS5 doesn't do any sort of software check to see if that component is actually present on the board, so once you do this you can turn your PS5 off and on anytime without making any noise. However - this is a bit risky if you don't know what you're doing, especially if you're not prepared to re-solder the buzzer back on in case Sony changes their mind about that software check in a future firmware upgrade.
That's cool. Is it the exact same component as in the PS4? Sure sounds the same. Maybe even the PS3? Haven't heard one boot in a long time, so don't really remember.
Xbox still has that loud ass boot screen still thoughDid it with Xbox and its been a game changer with wife, can PS5 do it too? It's even louder
I never hear it, its on rest mode, and you can mute the tvXbox still has that loud ass boot screen still though
Number 1 isn't true. It would still beep.You have two very impractical options to get rid of the noise:
1) If you connect remotely through the remote play app while your PlayStation 5 is in rest mode, it will turn on without beeping. This requires you to install the remote play app on your phone, connect it to your PlayStation - then disconnect from your local wifi, connect to your 4G or 5G cellular connection, then launch remote play and tell it to start your game. The system will turn on (without the beep) and from there you can kill the app and play with a regular controller on your TV.
2) Open your PS5 and desolder the buzzer from the motherboard. This speaker is a Murata Piezo buzzer, and it's pretty easy to desolder. Currently, the PS5 doesn't do any sort of software check to see if that component is actually present on the board, so once you do this you can turn your PS5 off and on anytime without making any noise. However - this is a bit risky if you don't know what you're doing, especially if you're not prepared to re-solder the buzzer back on in case Sony changes their mind about that software check in a future firmware upgrade.
And no complaints about all the controller clickity clicks?Nah she naps in couch
Well that's unhealthy if she's napping at night instead of sleeping, also if she's napping there instead of bed, that's fucking annoying and a bad habit, she'd be better served napping on her actual bed.Nah she naps in couch
Nothing like watching a movie on Netflix where you turn up the volume for the explosions. Then the next day turning on the Series X and waking up the entire house with the boot up muisic. Sometimes I remember to turn the volume back down, sometimes.Xbox still has that loud ass boot screen still though
I don't have a way to test this now, unfortunately. But it's entirely possible that it changed in a firmware update. As of about 3-4 months ago, that method still worked.Number 1 isn't true. It would still beep.
I never hear it, its on rest mode, and you can mute the tv
You have two very impractical options to get rid of the noise:
1) If you connect remotely through the remote play app while your PlayStation 5 is in rest mode, it will turn on without beeping. This requires you to install the remote play app on your phone, connect it to your PlayStation - then disconnect from your local wifi, connect to your 4G or 5G cellular connection, then launch remote play and tell it to start your game. The system will turn on (without the beep) and from there you can kill the app and play with a regular controller on your TV.
2) Open your PS5 and desolder the buzzer from the motherboard. This speaker is a Murata Piezo buzzer, and it's pretty easy to desolder. Currently, the PS5 doesn't do any sort of software check to see if that component is actually present on the board, so once you do this you can turn your PS5 off and on anytime without making any noise. However - this is a bit risky if you don't know what you're doing, especially if you're not prepared to re-solder the buzzer back on in case Sony changes their mind about that software check in a future firmware upgrade.
Right? I feel like its yelling at me.Xbox still has that loud ass boot screen still though
Well shucks, they must have changed it then. It used to be that if you were on the same network as the PS5, it would beep. But if you were on a different network (cellular / 5G / etc) then it would boot up without beeping.My PS5 still beeps when booting from remote play...
Well shucks, they must have changed it then. It used to be that if you were on the same network as the PS5, it would beep. But if you were on a different network (cellular / 5G / etc) then it would boot up without beeping.
Better brush up on your soldering skills then!