After years of Xbox and PC exclusivity, Bethesda's spacefaring RPG Starfield is finally touching down on PlayStation 5 this Monday, April 7. The PS5 version arrives at $49.99 alongside a meaty free update called Free Lanes and a new story expansion, Terran Armada, giving PlayStation players the most complete version of the game to date.
Bethesda dropped a features trailer earlier this week showcasing what the DualSense controller brings to the experience, and honestly, some of these additions sound like genuine improvements rather than afterthoughts.
DualSense Makes Space Combat Feel Different
The adaptive triggers are doing the heavy lifting here. Each weapon type — both on the ground and in your starship — has its own distinct resistance profile through the L2 and R2 buttons. Bethesda says the difference between firing a laser pistol and unloading a heavy ballistic rifle is immediately noticeable in your hands.
The DualSense's lightbar has been put to work as a health indicator, shifting colors to reflect your current state. It pulses red when you're in danger and fades back to white as you recover, which applies to both ground exploration and ship combat. The built-in speaker handles audio logs and ship intercoms, pulling some of the ambient audio right into the controller.
Touchpad gestures add quick-access shortcuts — swipe to switch perspectives, open the map, activate the scanner, or jump into your inventory without pausing the action.
PS5 Pro Gets Two Visual Modes
For PS5 Pro owners, Starfield offers a choice between Pro Visual Mode — targeting 4K at 30fps for maximum fidelity — and Pro Performance Mode, which pushes for 60fps with a slightly lower resolution target. Both modes leverage PlayStation Spectral Super Resolution (PSSR) upscaling, which should keep things looking sharp regardless of which option you prefer.
Standard PS5 owners still get the base experience with DualSense integration, but the Pro modes are clearly where Bethesda has focused its optimization efforts.
Timing Matters
The PS5 launch comes at an interesting moment for Starfield. The game has had a complicated relationship with its PC audience — sitting at a mixed 55% positive rating on Steam — and the community has been vocal about Bethesda prioritizing the PlayStation port and paid content over addressing long-standing feedback on the base game.
That said, PlayStation players are getting a version of Starfield that includes every update and improvement made since the original September 2023 launch, plus the Shattered Space expansion content. Whether that's enough to win over a new audience remains to be seen, but Monday's launch represents a significant expansion of the game's reach.
