Sony has unveiled the first details of its successor to the PlayStation 4. Speaking with Wired, lead system architect Mark Cerny released a few details about the system, which he referred to as the "next-gen console" rather than the expected PlayStation 5.
First, it won't launch this year, although Sony has ramped up the distribution of dev kits to studios so they can work towards it. And when it does launch, it will have physical discs and be backwards compatible with the PlayStation 4.
One of the big advances in the hardware appears to be the introduction of a solid-state drive (SSD) that will work with the system to give faster results than using an SSD with the PS4 (something users can already do by purchasing and installing the SSD on their own). To demonstrate, Cerny showed Wired a version of Spider-Man running on a PS4 Pro with an SSD and compared it to the same game running on an early dev kit of the next-gen console with its SSD. The game's quick travel loading screen took 15 seconds on the PS4 Pro, compared to less than one second on the next-gen console dev kit.
Cerny declined to go into detail on the next system's plans for streaming games and virtual reality, but did say the company's "vision" on the former should become clear before launch, while the latter "is very important to us." He also confirmed that existing PSVR headsets would work with the new console.
As for other hardware details, the system CPU is based on a third-generation AMD Ryzen chip that has specialized support for 3D audio.

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