the best thing to come out of the change to x86 is that porting will become massivley easier, and the scale up period for the new games should be far shorter (x86 code is x86 code) but the point where game play starts to suffer for the sake of graphics may also be reached quicker
the people transferring from the old PS3 processor are going to have to relearn stuff i expect.
the use of 8GB of DDR5 probably means a split pool more like the xbox where both the CPU and GPU can allocate resources to be stored on it, instead of the dedicated divide that has made skyrim run like shit on PS3. also i thought x86 was limited in the bytes of ram it could handle anyway regardless of OS or clever programming (its a hardware thing)
AMD stands to make alot of money off a low power CPU (its designed for portability, and lower energy use not power) which means they can finial drop money on the bleeding edge stuff of the future
TLDR; this is actually a good thing for the PC market, AMD gets monies from sony, and ports should now be PS4 -> PC, not XBOX -> PC due to the same CPU architectural (the most important part)
the people transferring from the old PS3 processor are going to have to relearn stuff i expect.
the use of 8GB of DDR5 probably means a split pool more like the xbox where both the CPU and GPU can allocate resources to be stored on it, instead of the dedicated divide that has made skyrim run like shit on PS3. also i thought x86 was limited in the bytes of ram it could handle anyway regardless of OS or clever programming (its a hardware thing)
AMD stands to make alot of money off a low power CPU (its designed for portability, and lower energy use not power) which means they can finial drop money on the bleeding edge stuff of the future
TLDR; this is actually a good thing for the PC market, AMD gets monies from sony, and ports should now be PS4 -> PC, not XBOX -> PC due to the same CPU architectural (the most important part)