Hard drive is replaceable. Microsoft Xbox One S. Sony PlayStation 4 Slim. The internal hard drive can be replaced by the user, for example if you wish to upgrade to a larger storage capacity. Has an internal power supply. Microsoft Xbox One S. Sony PlayStation 4 Slim. The more analog sticks, the more complex the input can be. has an integrated touchpad. Microsoft Xbox One. Sony PlayStation 5. With a touchpad, users can control the device by moving their finger on a touch-sensitive surface. Has dual force feedback. Microsoft Xbox One. Sony PlayStation 5. The PlayStation 5 generation is getting a shakeup already with the impending release of the PS5 Slim, and if Sony follows the template set by the PS4, we could well be due to get a PS5 Pro, too A short while later, Microsoft also throws in the reveal of a PS5 Pro for good measure. PlayStation, meanwhile, currently offers two different versions of the PlayStation 5—one with a Blu-Ray I've heard largely similar things regarding both versions of the console, but I'm still on the fence about it. On one hand, the slim model has significantly more storage (1 TB vs 825 GB) but the design's a bit weird and the vertical stand costs like $30 extra. The regular version looks better imo but doesn't have as much storage. Following the launch of the PS4 in November 2013, the PlayStation 4 Slim and higher-end PlayStation 4 Pro both appeared in September 2016. The same was true of the PlayStation 3, which saw another three-year gap between its launch in 2006 and the Slim version in 2009. If Sony follows the same timetable, we could still see a PS5 Slim and/or PS5 Xbox One X: 8-core, 2.3GHz processor. PS4 Pro: 8-core, 2.13GHz processor. PS4 Pro is using an improved version of the original model’s chip with a slightly boosted clock speed. The Pro now runs Below is a full tech specs comparison for PS5 against PS4, which includes both PS4 and PS4 Pro. Component. PS5. PS4 Pro. PS4. CPU. 8x Zen 2 Cores at 3.5GHz (Variable Frequency) 2.1GHz 8-Core AMD k9LyElZ.