Sadly , on Digital Foundry Review, the PS5 doesn't support neither VRR nor an 8K output signal outof the box. Sure it will patched along the road. It was tested on an LG highend HDMI 2.1 8K TV.kareem_nasser wroteMost of its features are not supported unless it is a high end TV, even then you won't actually need to be playing at 120hz most of the games, if they support such mode in the first place. This is mainly tailored for competitive gaming. Expect a lot of graphical sacrifices if games support 120 frames per second, especially resolution and RayTracing.bobo619 wroteHDMI 2.1 bandwidth is superior of any display portRamim91 wroteGuys it is possible to convert hdmi 2.1 to display port? I have asus gaming monitor with hdmi 1.2 and display port. Or it is useless in this case?
Thanks
The best features are Variable Refresh Rate and Auto Low Latency Mode, the latter basically switches your TVs mode to Gaming Mode for the lowest latency possible, but still this is personally my default mode for the HDMI inputs i use.
Note: With a TV capable of HDMI 2.0 and 120hz display, you might be able to switch to 1080p120 mode. Some TVs do not support it natively though then it will only work via forcing it over a custom resolution on a PC.
Nevertheless,
The ordered the Sony Bravia X900H , a very decent 2160p120hz HDR TV.
Fully fledged HDMI 2.1 48gbps ports
Decent FALD
Decent Real HDR peak brightness
Decent Coverage of DCI P3 and Rec 2020 wide color gamut.
It's a Sony very reliable builds
& most importanly no innate risk for sudden image burn ins and image retentions. Innate risk of OLED technology regardless of brand.