
Join us as we look back at some of the biggest trailers that appeared on our YouTube channel this year.
We hope you’re having a wonderful holiday! We’re taking it easy over at PlayStation HQ, but we couldn’t resist looking back at some of the biggest and best trailers of 2019. We’ve gathered a few of our favorites below; feel free to reminisce with us! Did we miss any? Share your faves in the comments!
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare – Reveal Trailer

Death Stranding – Release Date Reveal Trailer

Devil May Cry 5 – Final Trailer

Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot – E3 2019 Trailer

Final Fantasy VII Remake – E3 2019 Trailer

Final Fantasy VIII Remastered – E3 2019 Trailer

Ghost of Tsushima -The Ghost

Godfall – Reveal Trailer

Marvel’s Avengers – Kamala Khan Embiggen Trailer

Marvel’s Iron Man VR – Announce Trailer

Monster Hunter World: Iceborne – Gameplay Reveal Trailer

Mortal Kombat 11 Kombat Pack – Official Terminator T-800 Gameplay Trailer

Predator: Hunting Grounds – Reveal Trailer

Resident Evil 3 – State of Play Announcement Trailer

Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice – Official Launch Trailer

Borderlands 3 had some awesome trailers!
Of this list Sekiro rules for me :)
The last of us part 2 release date trailer!!
I must have watched the Star Wars Jedi Fallen Order Launch trailer like 1,000 times. I think that was by far the best.
Samurai Shodown’s PAX 2019 Trailer:
https://youtu.be/HiiX3xmkxmo
Playstation needs to be at least 16 Teraflops of power. It needs at least 20Gb of GDDR6. 500$ price point.
People are going to go for the most powerful console not the cheapest.
At least, those that spend a lot on gaming will go with the more powerful one.
Facts!
16 Teraflops and 20 GB of DDR6 memory at a $499 price point? That’s just impossible, Sony would lose like $300 with each Ps5. It’s absurd.
People will go for the cheaper console with the better games.
I’m with Strangeheaven. Also, it makes no sense to have that much power when only 1 out of ~12 games actually use it.
We’re still pretending to know what teraflops do for games and how they function between different architectures? Good to know.