• Home
  • Games
  • Games News
  • Epic Games Showcases Unreal Engine 5 Running on PlayStation 5, Launches Epic Online Services For Developers

Epic Games Showcases Unreal Engine 5 Running on PlayStation 5, Launches Epic Online Services For Developers

We get a first real glimpse of next-gen console graphics, and it’s stunning!

Epic Games Showcases Unreal Engine 5 Running on PlayStation 5, Launches Epic Online Services For Developers

Photo Credit: Epic Games

Unreal Engine 5 demoed on a PS5 looks pretty amazing

Highlights
  • Unreal Engine 5 introduces Nanite, Lumen technologies for realistic graph
  • The demo was running in real-time on a PS5
  • Unreal Engine 5 will be launching late 2021
Advertisement

Microsoft and Sony have already begun generating hype about their respective next-gen gaming consoles, but up until now, we haven't seen anything that has really blown us away. All that changed when Epic Games demoed its upcoming game engine — the Unreal Engine 5 (UE5). The demo was showcased on a PlayStation 5 developer kit. According to Epic, the goal of the next generation engine is to deliver photorealism on par with the CG (computer graphics) seen in movies. It also introduced two new core technologies as part of the new engine called Nanite and Lumen, for high-level of geometric details and dynamic global illumination for realistic lighting.

The nine minute demo has Brian Karis, Technical Director of Graphics and Jerome Platteaux, Special Projects Art Director, taking us through the technical aspects of the demo. The headline features of course are the two core technologies built in Unreal Engine 5 that are Nanite and Lumen. Nanite is a virtualised micropolygon geometry that allows film-quality source art to be imported into the engine and can be scaled in real-time. In other words, there's no memory or polygon count constraints any more for any given scene, which in turn can allow a developer to use hundreds of million or even billions of polygons to make the textures objects look highly detailed.

Lumen on the other hand is a lighting technology, which allows objects to dynamically react to any light source and change realistically if the source of the light changes. With this, developers don't have to bother using lightmaps as everything happens in real-time. Unreal Engine 5 will continue using the Chaos physics engine, Niagara VFX, convolution reverb, and ambisonics rendering from Epic.

Karis pauses the demo in certain places to explain what's actually going on behind the scene and how Epic was able to render such photorealistic graphics. However, the best part of the demo is towards the end, where you can actually get to see the scale of the world, all being rendered in real-time on the PlayStation 5. We're guessing this is just a taste of what next-gen consoles will be capable of and honestly, we're pretty excited.

The current Unreal Engine 4.25 already supports the upcoming Sony PlayStation 5 and Microsoft Xbox Series X consoles. Unreal Engine 5 will only be out as a preview early next year and will be fully released in late 2021, with support for next-gen as well as current-gen consoles, PCs, Mac, iOS, and Android devices. Epic says it is also designing forward-compatibility, so games built on Unreal Engine 4 (UE4) can be migrated to Unreal Engine 5 when it's ready. Fortnite, built on UE4, will be available as a launch title for next-gen consoles and will be migrated to UE5 in mid-2021.

Epic also announced the launch of the Epic Online Services, free to all developers to incorporate multiplayer services such as matchmaking, lobbies, achievements, leaderboards, and accounts, in their games. Epic built these for Fortnite and is now making them available for anyone to use, through a multi-platform SDK. Developers will have the option to use these services with their own games, thereby opening up their game to over 350 million players and their 2.2 billion friend connections from the Epic Games accounts.


Which is the bestselling Vivo smartphone in India? Why has Vivo not been making premium phones? We interviewed Vivo's director of brand strategy Nipun Marya to find out, and to talk about the company's strategy in India going forward. We discussed this on Orbital, our weekly technology podcast, which you can subscribe to via Apple Podcasts or RSS, download the episode, or just hit the play button below.

Comments

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

In Pandemic Times, All the Gaming World's a (Concert) Stage
US Says Chinese Hackers Might Be Targeting Coronavirus Researchers
Facebook Gadgets360 Twitter Share Tweet Snapchat LinkedIn Reddit Comment google-newsGoogle News

Advertisement

Follow Us
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2024. All rights reserved.
Trending Products »
Latest Tech News »