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Also include is a short comparison with DriveClub.
#Need for speed 2015 game saves ps4 Ps4#
Head to head comparison between the PS4 and Xbox One comparisons. Frame rate performance in general is better on the PS4 version. However, again, the number of effects combined with the large open world (which is twice the size of that in Rivals), velocity based motion blur, beautiful rain effects detailed screen space reflections and high dynamic range lighting make the current frame rate understandable. Both versions run at 30 FPS, which is a bummer given how other titles like Forza Motorsport 6 and Project CARS run at 60 frames per second.
#Need for speed 2015 game saves ps4 1080p#
As noted in our initial analysis, it runs at 1080p resolution on the PS4 and 900p resolution on the Xbox One, and our pixel counting wasn’t exactly easy due to the number of post processing effects on display. The new Need for Speed is focused purely on current gen platforms however. This is noteworthy because there weren’t many Xbox One titles that could hit that benchmark so early in the console’s life cycle (and many still struggle to achieve this).
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Perhaps most incredible was the fact that despite running at an almost locked 30 frames per second, it ran at 1080p resolution across all platforms. It was also the first cross-generational Need for Speed title, meaning it launched for Xbox 360 and PS3 along with Xbox One, PS4 and PC. Yes, it was about avoiding cops and taking part in illegal races based in an open world but it was dirtier and grittier than previous titles that stuck to a more metropolitan landscape. Of these, Need for Speed Rivals was probably the best indication of the series going forward. Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit (2010), Need for Speed: Most Wanted (2012) and even Need for Speed Rivals (2013) all worked to recapture what truly made the series great while repackaging it for the current generation. However, in time, Need for Speed began to look back at its former glory days and trying to translate this magic to whatever the current generation of consoles would be. From the first game, The Need for Speed, in 1994 to arguably the series’ peak with Need for Speed: Porsche Unleashed in 2000 and then traversing new territory in the Underground series, Need for Speed is a franchise that’s constantly being pulled in new directions. Whether you’re a fan of the series or not, it’s amazing to consider the journey that Need for Speed has undergone till now.