PLASTICA-MAN
Member
Added HDR to The Elder Scrolls Online with recent update: http://www.playstationlifestyle.net...support-mythical-aetherial-ambrosia/#/slide/1
Added HDR to The Elder Scrolls Online with recent update: http://www.playstationlifestyle.net...support-mythical-aetherial-ambrosia/#/slide/1
I could have added Death Stranding since Kojima tweets and Geoff highlighted 4K and some sites claimed it was Native 4K but I will wait for further details (maybe at PSX).
Kojima tech is obviously fantastic, but he's not a magician.
No chance in hell those graphics are native 4K on Pro.
Hesitation edit:
Could be native 4K in cutscenes though....maybe?
Kojima and Cerny were sitting next to eqch other at the awards, have some faith.
Abzu has just been updated with Pro support, trying to find out if its 4k native.
I hope not.I hope they confirm that Death Stranding is Native 4K at PSX.
I hope they confirm that Death Stranding is Native 4K at PSX.
I hope not.
The game can look better if they use reconstruction technique.
With the visual design and likely focus on faces Kojima has shown, I think they'd be fine going for full 2160c. Though that might bring the framerate target down to 30fps.Yes, I would prefer 1800p checkerboard over native 4K
So when a game is native 4K, what exactly does that mean from the dev's point of view?
I assumed it meant the assets were originally created at a 4K resolution, but I'm seeing these remasters being labeled as native 4K so I'm confused.
ESO doesn't have HDR. At least my TV is saying it doesn't.
So when a game is native 4K, what exactly does that mean from the dev's point of view?
I assumed it meant the assets were originally created at a 4K resolution, but I'm seeing these remasters being labeled as native 4K so I'm confused.
Is the last Re7 demo 4k native? It looks very vrry clean on a 1080p TV. Sure downsampled.
Did you go into the Video Option and turn it on?
ESO does indeed output in HDR. HDR is not great in that game and makes everything else a little darker, but it definitely does HDR, you just have to select it in the Video Options.
So when a game is native 4K, what exactly does that mean from the dev's point of view?
I assumed it meant the assets were originally created at a 4K resolution, but I'm seeing these remasters being labeled as native 4K so I'm confused.
There is no option to turn it off. It just enables HDR by default. I wish there was an option to disable it as it's the worst HDR I have seen. Only way to disable it is to turn off HDR completely in the PS4 settings.Did you go into the Video Option and turn it on?
ESO does indeed output in HDR. HDR is not great in that game and makes everything else a little darker, but it definitely does HDR, you just have to select it in the Video Options.
There is no option to turn it off. It just enables HDR by default. I wish there was an option to disable it as it's the worst HDR I have seen. Only way to disable it is to turn off HDR completely in the PS4 settings.
It just means that the game is being rendered at 4K... A game can render at native 4K with sub-4K assets... the two things are unrelated.
When I play Mass Effect 1 on PC and set the resolution to 4K, it's rendering in Native 4K despite having blurry textures.
Native 4K just means the image isn't being upscaled.
All native 4K means is that you're rendering into a 3840x2160 frame buffer. It says nothing about the nature of assets, which means you can still have extremely low-polygon models and low-resolution textures.
While it makes sense to optimize texture assets with the target resolution in mind, there's no absolute rule. You usually try to get away with as low-resolution as you can possible manage to minimize memory footprint, load times, and improve texture cache utilization to minimize memory bandwidth. It would be a complete waste to have a high-resolution texture that only gets used on small areas of the screen, or that doesn't contain high-frequency content in the form of contrasting color transitions, or one that is heavily filtered to smooth out any such sharp transitions.
Hmmm I think I follow. I don't really see why native 4K is even superior to upscaling then, in cases where the assets are low resolution to begin with. Or rather, it seems to me like it should be called "upscaling" no matter what, if the assets weren't 4K to begin with. So clearly my understanding of upscaling is faulty.
Hmmm I think I follow. I don't really see why native 4K is even superior to upscaling then, in cases where the assets are low resolution to begin with. Or rather, it seems to me like it should be called "upscaling" no matter what, if the assets weren't 4K to begin with. So clearly my understanding of upscaling is faulty.
Hmmm I think I follow. I don't really see why native 4K is even superior to upscaling then, in cases where the assets are low resolution to begin with. Or rather, it seems to me like it should be called "upscaling" no matter what, if the assets weren't 4K to begin with. So clearly my understanding of upscaling is faulty.
Battleborn
http://www.pcgamer.com/battleborn-w..._source=twitter&utm_campaign=buffer-pcgamertw
Do we know if it's native?
Do we have a time line for this update? Or its already updated?Resogun is getting a Pro patch. Will support HDR. Don't know if it will support Native 4K or not yet:
https://www.vg247.com/2016/12/08/resogun-is-getting-4k-ps4-pro-support-hdr/
Just announced (psx) no timeline afaik.Do we have a time line for this update? Or its already updated?
Holy ShamWow!Resogun is getting a Pro patch. Will support HDR. Don't know if it will support Native 4K or not yet:
https://www.vg247.com/2016/12/08/resogun-is-getting-4k-ps4-pro-support-hdr/
Holy ShamWow!
(Now give Alienation the same treatment!)
Not sure where to ask this (so many PS4 Pro threads):
I learned recently I would be getting a Pro so I've been doing some research after being the dark for the past couple of months. I'm curious if I purchase FIFA 17 and play it on my 1080p TV on a Pro, do I get the fringe benefits of it's native 4K (downsampled image quality for 1080p, DOF enhancements, etc.)?
Subsequently, does any game that offers native 4K also offer those benefits "downstream" for 1080p users unless explicitly stated (*cough* TLOU *cough*)?
Just wanted to confirm so I could purchase games that would really show off the hardware.
Hmmm I think I follow. I don't really see why native 4K is even superior to upscaling then, in cases where the assets are low resolution to begin with. Or rather, it seems to me like it should be called "upscaling" no matter what, if the assets weren't 4K to begin with. So clearly my understanding of upscaling is faulty.
Why isn't the gaming media keeping track of this?
My uncle bought his son a X1S because his 12 year old son told him it can play 4K games. Neither my uncle nor his son knew that a lot big hit games on the X1S were running at resolutions lower than 1080p. They both thought the PS4 was a weaker console. My uncle specifically bought a 4K TV and wants 4K games. Checking the major gaming sites, there's almost no mention of which systems actually play games in 4K. Not a single site was maintaining a list of games resolutions/frame rates.
Why isn't the gaming media keeping track of this?
My uncle bought his son a X1S because his 12 year old son told him it can play 4K games. Neither my uncle nor his son knew that a lot big hit games on the X1S were running at resolutions lower than 1080p. They both thought the PS4 was a weaker console. My uncle specifically bought a 4K TV and wants 4K games. Checking the major gaming sites, there's almost no mention of which systems actually play games in 4K. Not a single site was maintaining a list of games resolutions/frame rates.
Literally nowhere official states that the Xbox One S plays 4K games. So, his 12-year old goofed. Literally on the PS4 Pro product page on playstation.com, it states 4K gaming.
Like...these are simple internet searches.
Exactly this. It's extremely misleading advertising that led them to believe X1S is more powerful and can play 4K games.It doesn't help that the Xbox One S commercials are full of jargon that sounds good. "The only console with 4K Blu-ray, 4K video streaming, and HDR" sounds to the average user like it's a 4K games console when it's nowhere near that. "The newly designed Xbox One S, the ultimate games and 4K entertainment system."
Literally nowhere official states that the Xbox One S plays 4K games. So, his 12-year old goofed. Literally on the PS4 Pro product page on playstation.com, it states 4K gaming.
Like...these are simple internet searches.