I mean, the answer is “because they were compressed to fit on a HD DVD”, but you can still see this in the PC versions of games that came out in the seventh generation.

There’s colour banding, crushed blacks and who knows what else going on with these things. PS2 cutscenes did not look as bad and they were in DVD quality.

I have to assume it wasn’t this bad on the PS3. I mean, that’s what the Blu Rays were for, right?

      • VHS [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        2 years ago

        Even though it was a DVD drive! You had to buy the infrared remote. Meanwhile on PS2 you could control movies with any remote.

        • doublepepperoni [none/use name]@hexbear.netOP
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          2 years ago

          Sony has been surprisingly decent about that kind of stuff since the PS3. I believe you could stick any regular hard drive into it, whereas you needed proprietary official Microsoft Xbox 360 hard drives which were naturally sold at a huge markup

          Their controllers also take any regular USB cables and use Bluetooth so they connect to PCs effortlessly

          • ssjmarx [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            2 years ago

            Sony tried to market the PS3 as a multimedia entertainment hub - in hindsight it was an idea ahead of its time, since that’s what basically all Smart TVs are now - but the $700 price tag made it unattainable during the critical first year of sales.

            it also launched with “install other OS” as a feature, which they removed later via an update.

            • MolotovHalfEmpty [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              2 years ago

              It was expensive, but I think people forget what a stupidly good blu-ray player the PS3 was.

              I, like many people, bought it because it was the best way to watch movies - with the added bonus of games. It was at least £100 cheaper than any decent blu-ray player. It worked better and more reliably than any of the other ones on the market. It was the only one that could access things like online blu-ray features for years and it got basically every future blu-ray player feature not only as a patch instead of having to buy a new unit, but sometimes months or years ahead of other blu-ray player manufacturers.