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Originally Posted by Icemage Actually the PS3 performs great at audio too. The only weakness it has in that arena is that it doesn't have analog connectors, so if you have a non-HDMI receiver, then the audio has to go through optical, which isn't such a good option.
With an HDMI-capable receiver, however, the PS3's audio performance matches that of any standalone unit on the market (exception made for the handful of units that can bitstream DTS-High Definition Master Audio, but I have it on very good authority that the PS3 will eventually receive a firmware update to decode DTS-MA audio codec). Otherwise it handles LPCM and Dolby TrueHD flawlessly, and still provides a quite excellent DTS-1.5Mbps core on DTS-HD HR/MA encoded Blu-rays. |
This is all true, so maybe I should emphasize my point, that its sound capabilities are perfectly workable until you compare it to the high end players. People are nagging about how the PS3 is heavy, try out some of the high end stuff! A pretty decent DVD player like the Denon A1XVA weighs in at 19 kilos, and that is all down to specialized circuitry to tweak the extra nuances out of sound and video. You do need some equally serious AVR's and speakers to appreciate it though.
Anyone truly serious about their home cinemas are usually aware of this, so maybe I should have assumed that this really wasn't an issue, and gone for the PS3 option - because it goes a long way, and you can play different games in different rooms at the same time to boot (an option I sometimes miss...)