I noticed
@Strubes mentioned he had a CRAP ton of games in this thread:
Re: Playstation 4 - Is it your main console? (https://www.chickendinnergaming.com/forum/index.php?topic=56.msg1890#msg1890)
On the Vita, I bought the 64GB memory card... and even filled that up at one point. On my PS4, I installed a 1TB hard drive... but might actually expand it at some point.
So what do you do to manage your storage? It becomes more of a problem when more games require them to be installed... if I am correct, all games are read off the Hard Drive now - could be wrong. Also, Games are much larger these days topping 60-80GB. 11 Games and you've almost filled a 1TB hard drive.
Comments? Thoughts? Post it up!
So, I have a 1 TB HDD in my PS4. I have 872 games purchased, and between 175-200 installed at one time. I strictly buy digital since I split cost with a friend via game sharing. I tend to keep only a handful of games that are large on my HDD at a time. I switch em out as I beat them, mostly. 😊
I use an external HD that I install games and stuff on. Only thing is that it gets unplugged by my cats sometimes when they horse around near it. XD
Quote from: Kinikko on May 08, 2018, 10:00:42 PM
I use an external HD that I install games and stuff on. Only thing is that it gets unplugged by my cats sometimes when they horse around near it. XD
LOL
@Kinikko NO KITTAH!!!!!!!! How do you work it with the external HardDrive? I really haven't done this - is it fast enough run all games? Or are there some games you noticed a bit slower loading...etc?
@Strubes How in the crap do you still have 175-200 installed? The majority must be pretty small - obviously.
I have a 2tb external hd which is just pug in to the usb at the front, don't really notice any difference in loading speeds either
Have just had a look cause I couldn't remember the size and see i've almost filed my external XD might have to do a bit of clearing out of that one with stuff I don't play
The default drives that come with the PS4 are 5400RPM anyways, so an external HD shouldn't be much of a difference. Actually, SSDs barely improve speeds anyways so your experience is going to be consistent regardless.
I have an external for my Xbox 360 and I don't notice a difference. I'll probably get one eventually for my PS4.
I have launch ps4's so there's 500 gb's on each... that have long since been filled up. Between downloading psn's free games and buying everything I can get my hands on I've had to be 4tb expansion drives for each of the two ps4s in the house.
Quote from: BLUEVOODU on May 08, 2018, 10:02:33 PM
Quote from: Kinikko on May 08, 2018, 10:00:42 PM
I use an external HD that I install games and stuff on. Only thing is that it gets unplugged by my cats sometimes when they horse around near it. XD
LOL @Kinikko NO KITTAH!!!!!!!! How do you work it with the external HardDrive? I really haven't done this - is it fast enough run all games? Or are there some games you noticed a bit slower loading...etc?
@Strubes How in the crap do you still have 175-200 installed? The majority must be pretty small - obviously.
@BLUEVOODU , Yep! Around 80-90% of my games are under 5GBs. A small portion are between 5-20GBs and a very small portion are above that. I like to try a little bit of everything, so I'm ALWAYS raiding flash sales and developer sales for games I don't have yet. 😅
@Strubes very cool. I had the habit of doing that on steam too lol. My PS4 just filled up super fast. I put the 1TB drive in... but it's filling up fast again.
Per everyone's recommendation, I will try an external hard drive at some point. Really... those used to be limiting factors (bus and speed)... but I guess it's not anymore. I would think one would see a decrease of some sort in loading speed... especially as large as games are. But maybe not.
Quote from: BLUEVOODU on May 17, 2018, 04:27:32 PM
Per everyone's recommendation, I will try an external hard drive at some point. Really... those used to be limiting factors (bus and speed)... but I guess it's not anymore.
eh, it still kind of is. That's why having an external isn't such a downgrade because the internal drive is limited by bus speeds. I've seen articles where people have installed SSDs and the result was not much different than a 5400RPM drive. For some reason, Sony has capped it at the kernel level (Same with PS3.) And now that I think about it, this could be why, to keep the experience the same so you don't notice much of a difference.
I don't play the PS4 all that much. That being said I installed a 2TB HDD in mine. That's probably the smallest I think should be in a modern console.
Quote from: Polygon on May 18, 2018, 01:42:07 PM
I don't play the PS4 all that much. That being said I installed a 2TB HDD in mine. That's probably the smallest I think should be in a modern console.
@Polygon You are 100% right. 2TB should be the standard drive... especially for the price. I'm sure the companies would receive a good discount with the quantity they pull. However, 2TB 2.5" SATA drives are still somewhat pricey. Price per GB is only $0.04 for 1 of the drives - 2TB Western Digital Blue 5400RPM. Not sure how they would perform in a PlayStation 4 though.
@CreepinDeth I didn't realize they capped it at the Kernel level. That's interesting - It makes sense to provide a consistent experience. However, it limits the upside potential for those who want to upgrade... which sucks a bit.
100% agreed that 2 TB should be the standard size for hard drives on modern consoles. Most games are upwards of at least 70 GBs.
Quote from: BLUEVOODU on September 03, 2018, 11:50:27 AM
@Polygon You are 100% right. 2TB should be the standard drive... especially for the price. I'm sure the companies would receive a good discount with the quantity they pull. However, 2TB 2.5" SATA drives are still somewhat pricey. Price per GB is only $0.04 for 1 of the drives - 2TB Western Digital Blue 5400RPM. Not sure how they would perform in a PlayStation 4 though.
Sony or Microsoft would get a bulk discount but since they're not free, the cost still adds up. Let's say they can get 2TB drives at $20 a pop and they ship 200,000 units with those. That comes out to $4,000,000 just for those drives.
And then let's say they get 500GB drives for $5 each and ship the same 200,00 units. That only costs $1,000,000. Even with discounted prices, the margins are much different.
That's probably why Sony allows you to upgrade your own drive just so that they can save money.
Quote
@CreepinDeth I didn't realize they capped it at the Kernel level. That's interesting - It makes sense to provide a consistent experience. However, it limits the upside potential for those who want to upgrade... which sucks a bit.
Yeah, I'll see if I can find the articles on it. Makes sense in the long run. It's probably also there to help keep the drive from wearing down quickly.