48 Hours Left: The Sony 'Tax' that will hike your PS5 price to £550
- 30 Mar, 2026
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The Great Shift: Why April 2nd Marks the End of the Console Era
The perfect storm: Sony is hiking prices while AMD and NVIDIA open the gates to PC heaven. We analyse if being a "console gamer" is still worth the bill.
We are just hours away from a permanent market shift. If you’ve been waiting for a sign to upgrade your rig, here it is: 2026 hardware waits for no one.
1. The End of "Budget" Gaming: Farewell to £450
The news has hit UK hardware forums like a cold shower: Sony has confirmed the PS5 price will jump to £549.99 this Thursday. What used to be an affordable appliance is now knocking on the door of mid-to-high-end PC territory.
Why pay more for a walled garden? This hike isn't an isolated event; it’s the final nudge many needed to jump ship to open silicon. And just in time, too, as the competition has made a masterful move.
2. Ryzen 7 9850X3D: The Engine of Your New Freedom
If consoles limit you, the new 9850X3D sets you free. Boasting 104MB of L3 cache, this chip has become the 2026 gold standard for gaming. By leveraging the maturity of the AM5 platform, a PC upgrade is now cheaper and more sustainable than accepting Sony's new tax.
It’s not just about raw power; it’s about stability. In open-world titles where the PS5 struggles to maintain 60 FPS, this Ryzen doesn't even break a sweat.
3. DLSS 4.5: Black Magic or the Future of Silicon?
But hardware isn't the whole story. Tomorrow, 31st March, NVIDIA releases its most ambitious driver yet: DLSS 4.5. Thanks to advanced AI frame generation, you no longer need a £1,500 GPU to play like a pro.
The AI now "understands" motion so precisely it can triple your frames with zero perceptible latency. It is, quite literally, like getting a GPU upgrade via a free download.
4. Code Red: The "AI Tax" on Your Storage
Here’s the plot twist. While CPUs and GPUs are shining, storage is getting pricy. The global AI server frenzy is draining NAND flash inventory, causing prices to spike by 46% this quarter.







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