- Weapons are amongst the most recognizable Final Fantasy features. The heavily romanticized designs are the embodiment of the 'fantasy based on reality' philosophy that was used for Final Fantasy XV: real-life weaponry is the point of departure, but the lush ornamentation (inspired by various styles like baroque and rococo) belongs to the realm of fantasy. The following is a list of weapons in.
- Final Fantasy 15 Update 1.30 June 24 Patch Terminates Origin & More. Square Enix has released the Final Fantasy XV update 1.30 or what we’ll call the Final Fantasy 15 update 1.30 June 24 patch and it’s live. This is called Revision 1282261 and kills online support for Origin and more. Check out the official changes below.
- The FFXV PS4 Pro patch should appear at some point in December. If everything turns out the way it should, you should be playing the upgraded version withing a month of release. If everything turns out the way it should, you should be playing the upgraded version withing a month of release.
In a surprising turn of events, we are informing about patch 1.05 for Final Fantasy XV. The biggest feature of this release is an addition of PlayStation 4 Pro Lite Mode. It should allow the game to work “with a maximum of 60FPS”, with wording suggesting that’s not a locked framerate. New limited-time contests and hunts are also.
Up until today, the massive quest game Final Fantasy XV offered at least one 'smooth' visual option for every single platform it's been released on—meaning, one option with a locked, mostly consistent frame rate. The catch has always been that PlayStation 4 Pro players have had to pick its simplest 'lite' toggle (which removes all special visual enhancements) to enjoy this stable 30 frames-per-second refresh.
A new patch for the game went live on Monday, however, and owners of the pricier PlayStation 4 Pro may want to skip it if they dislike video stutter.
Unlike on Xbox One and standard PS4, the PS4 Pro version of FFXV asks players to pick from one of two visual modes. One of these turns up the resolution to somewhere near 1800p and adds other visual effects, but its frame rate is hampered by 'frame pacing,' in which its otherwise accurate 30Hz refresh is constantly interrupted by consistent judders. The other, 'lite' mode originally dropped the resolution and other elements to nail a locked 30fps.
AdvertisementToday's 1.05 patch changes lite mode by removing a pretty important element: its frame rate cap. Now, the lower-resolution mode renders frames as quickly as it can, usually to the tune of 45 or 50fps. That may sound like an upgrade, but the problem, as the video analysts at Digital Foundry make plainly clear, is that most TV displays are not able to display video frames in any pattern other than 30Hz or 60Hz (with the exception of some PAL-minded 50Hz sets in various parts of the world). An inconsistent frame rate thus tends to look worse and feel less responsive to gaming button taps than even the 'slow' 30Hz option.
Worse, Square Enix has also taken the bizarre step of removing the frame rate cap as a toggle, all while still leaving its 'high' 1800p mode with the same, abysmal frame-pacing issues. The result: Until Square Enix issues anotherFfxv Ps4 Update
patch, no mode in Final Fantasy XV will look or feel smooth on PlayStation 4 Pro systems. Owners of more expensive hardware are left with an inferior experience, and this runs afoul of Sony's rules about Pro versions of its PS4 software.In a future TV and console generation, this might not be an issue, as variable refresh rates will be baked into the HDMI 2.1 standard (which would remove the jumpiness that FFXV's new patch currently introduces). Current game systems will likely not be compatible with HDMI 2.1, however.
This article has been updated with clarification about HDMI 2.1.
Square Enix have revealed some information about the Playstation 4 Pro patch for Final Fantasy XV. The upgrade will be coming after the game launches, and it will enable the new console to make full use of its power to get better performance out of the game, as well as prettier visuals.The FFXV PS4 Pro patch should appear at some point in December. If everything turns out the way it should, you should be playing the upgraded version withing a month of release. Just don’t expect it to be ready at launch.
As far as features are concerned, little is known at this point. They’re aiming to get the 1080p version running at 60 FPS, but the 4K version will be limited to 30 frames per second. If you own a 4K screen, you’re in for a tough choice – whether to play at a higher resolution with noticable blur, or at a lower reoslution but with ostensibly better framerate.
Ffxv Ps4 Update 1.30
Since the battles are pretty action oriented, 60 FPS could give the combat system more depth, more opportunity for blocking, dodging or countering. On the other hand, a consistent framerate is crucial in games like this, and the lower the target framerate, the easier it is to stick to it.We’re also hoping there will be more knobs and sliders to tweak. Having only a couple of presets is a realistic outcome, but it would be better if we could choose what to sacrifice if we’re not satisfied with performance – just like we do on PC.