The console landscape in 2026 is the most interesting it has been in a decade. Here is the honest state of each platform.
PlayStation 5 Pro:
- Hardware is impressive. The GPU upgrade and AI upscaling make native 4K at 60fps a reality for most games. Source: Digital Foundry analysis.
- The game library is the strongest in the industry. Spider-Man 2, FF7 Rebirth, Stellar Blade, plus multiplats.
- The $700 price point without a disc drive is aggressive. Sony is betting on digital-only.
- PlayStation exclusives remain the primary reason to own the console.
Xbox Series X:
- Game Pass is the best value in gaming. $17/month for day-one access to every Microsoft first-party game.
- The Bethesda and Activision acquisitions give them Starfield, Elder Scrolls, Call of Duty, and Diablo.
- The exclusive situation is confusing. Microsoft keeps releasing "exclusives" on PS5 months later. This undermines the reason to buy the hardware.
- The hardware itself is fine but has no technical advantage over PS5 Pro.
Nintendo Switch 2:
- Just launched. The hybrid concept continues to be brilliant.
- NVIDIA hardware upgrade means it can actually run modern third-party games (at reduced settings).
- Backward compatibility with Switch 1 games is a massive library advantage.
- Nintendo first-party (Zelda, Mario, Pokemon) remains the strongest exclusive lineup in gaming.
My ranking for 2026:
- PS5 (Pro or base) — best exclusive games
- Gaming PC — best performance and value long-term
- Nintendo Switch 2 — best portable and best first-party
- Xbox Series X — Game Pass is great but the hardware argument is weak
Sources: Digital Foundry, IGN hardware reviews, NPD sales data, platform-specific game libraries
PS5 Pro at $700 without a disc drive is PlayStation saying "we own you" and honestly they might be right. Where else am I playing God of War?