When the PS5 launched, it was impossible to get hold of. Scalpers had a field day using bots to skip online queues, and regular gamers were left out in the cold, without a spaceship to adorn their TV stand ahead of Christmas. Xboxes were slightly easier to find, but the PS5 was gold dust. It was the console, it was the Christmas present, and yet I couldn’t help but feel disappointed w𒆙ith mine.

I managed to get one through my phone contract provider, and happily played 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Miles Morales over the Christmas break. The story was great, and the biggest difference I noticed from playing Spider-Man on my PS4 was the feeling in the adaptive triggers as I swung around New York. It was a good time, but I couldn’t help but think would have been just as good on PS4. Then I turned my Xbox on and played something on Game Pass.

Related: Redfall Is Ye🤪t Another Exclusive Blunder That Xbox Can’t Afford

Over six months later, I played 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart. It was good fun, although I wasn’t certain that the marketing lines were entirely true – I think a PS4 Pro could have handled those dimensional rifts, albeit not quite as smoothly as its successor. In between, I turned it on occasionally to play FIFA (adaptive triggers turned off) and had brief ⛎forays into cla𒅌ssic PS4 games like The Last of Us, God of War, and Bloodborne. I also bounced off Returnal, but I can’t hold that against the console.

Ratchet And Clank Posing Together

It was at about this point that 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:I decided to sell my PS5. It wasn’t a particularly difficult decision. There’s no need to have two current-gen consoles other than to play all of the exclusives – which I largely need in order to, you know, do my job – but when there were so few exclusives, what was the point? And if I’m choosing between one console that allows me to replay a bunch of last-gen games and one that includes nearly every one of its new releases on my monthly subscription plan, that syncs progress with my PC saves, and that had Halo Infinite on the horizon (oh how my excitement was misplaced), I&r🌜squo;m choosing the Xbox.

I didn’t once regret my decision. While Xbox hasn’t had many notable exclusives since 🌠the ill-fated Halo, Pentiment and Ghostwire: Tokyo were both great. I missed God of War Ragnarok, but having not enjoyed the f♑irst instalment, I was fine skipping the bloated sequel for the time being.

On May 4, 2023, as I write this article,𓂃 I’m starting to regret selling my PS5. Maybe I’ll rephrase that. I don’t regret selling it – what would be the point in keeping a £500 paperweight in my living room for two years? But I’m starting to wish I had one again.

clive approaching a city in final fantasy 16
via Square Enix

Spi💝der-Man 2 is releasing later this year, and fans are hoping it will improve on the first game in a number of ways. Get rid of the Mary Jane stealth sections (or give her something better to do), throw in Miles Morales’ storytelling, somehow revitalise a New York that we’ve swung through for dozens of hours now (maybe by moving beyond Manhattan), and you’ve got a winne🔜r. You’ve got it. I haven’t. Because I don’t have a PS5.

The same goes for Final Fantasy 16, another PS5 exclu𒊎sive. I’m not a die hard fan of the series, but something about this game calls to me. Maybe it’s the fact that I work for a website full of series stans, maybe it’s because of the promise of medieval Kaij♌u battles, but I want in. £70 for a game may feel like a lot, but how about £570?

I’m not buying a whole console just to play one game, but will I fork out the cash to play two? Also no. I know I’m missing out, though, and it’s the first time I’ve felt this🌄 FOMO since the release of current-gen. If you’ve been on the fence a🥂bout buying a PS5, now is the time to start saving. The console finally has exclusives, and the rest of us need to play vicariously through you.

Next: If Zelda Isn’t Playable In Tea🐽rs Of The Kingdom, We Riot