Sony appears set to announce the long-anticipated PlayStation 5 Pro during a presentation on Tuesday.
The company today announced plans to deliver a nine-minutePS5“technical presentation” hosted by lead system architectMark Cerny.

The stream will begin on September 10 at 8am PT / 11am ET / 4pm BST and will be broadcast in English on thePlayStationYouTube channel.
Update9th Sep 2024 / 10:38 pm
Sony appears to have inadvertentlyconfirmed PS5 Pro’s nameahead of it official reveal.
The presentation “will focus on PS5 and innovations in gaming technology”, according toSony.

PS5 Pro’s design will look similar to the PS5 Slim, and the console will still be coloured white,according to a recent leakwhich claimed Sony would announce the console in the first half of September.
The main difference reportedly is the addition of three black stripes across the middle of the console, differentiating it from other PS5 models.

Sony may subsequently have confirmed the leak by includingan illustration of the PS5 Pro designin aPlayStation 30th Anniversary announcement last week.
In April, YouTuber Moore’s Law is Dead leaked official Sony documentation explaining the console’s specifications, taken fromSony Interactive Entertainment‘s Developer Network.

The document was verified by other sites including IGN, and was thentaken down by a Sony copyright strike, lending further credibility to its authenticity.
The video suggested that the PS5 Pro’s CPU will be identical to that of the standard PS5, but that the new console will have a ‘High CPU Frequency Mode’ which increases the CPU by 10% to 3.85GHz, but reduces GPU performance by around 1% as a result.

Further reading
The GPU itself will be powered by 33.5 teraflops versus the PS5’s 10.28 teraflops, but this doesn’t mean it will be more than three times as powerful.
AsThe Vergenoted at the time, changes in AMD’s architecture means it’s difficult to directly compare teraflops directly between PS5 and PS5 Pro, and that in reality the comparison is more like 10.28 versus around 17 teraflops (indeed, the documentation leaked by Moore’s Law is Dead suggests “rendering is about 45% faster”).


