The Vita's design was intended to meld the experience of big-budget, dedicated video game platforms with the then up-and-coming trend of mobile gaming as seen on smart phones and tablets. Sony released the PlayStation TV, a short-lived, re-purposed version of the Vita that uses a television screen like a home video game console, discontinued at the end of 2015. It has all of the same features with a slightly smaller size, extended battery life, and an LCD screen instead of OLED. The PS Vita 2000 series, a revised version of the system, was released across 20. The Vita features a quad-core ARM Cortex-A9 MPCore CPU and a quad-core SGX543MP GPU. The original model of the handheld includes a 5-inch (130 mm) OLED multi-touch capacitive touchscreen, two analog joysticks, and front and shoulder push-button input, and supports Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and optional 3G. 4-6 hours for games, 7 hours for video, 12 hours for music (in stand-by mode) 3-5 hours for games, 5 hours for video, 9 hours for music (in stand-by mode) Īpprox. (, ,, , D-Pad, L, R, Start, Select, PS, Volume ±, Power)ĥ-inch multi-touch capacitive touchpad (back of the console)
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Stereo speakers, microphone, 3.5 mm headphone jack, Bluetooth
Proprietary PS Vita memory card (4, 8, 16, 32 or 64 GB)ĥ-inch (16:9) OLED (PCH-1000)/ LCD (PCH-2000) multi-touch capacitive touchscreen, approximately 17 million colors, 960 × 544 qHD 220 ppi PS Vita Card, digital distribution through PlayStation Network