Comments 2

Re: Your PS4's Seemingly Got a Little More Powerful in Secret

Denudingparadox

@Strangers In British English, 'has got' does not simply refer to possession, it can also be used to mean 'has become' (usually on more informal situations). This is an example of the present perfect; used (in this case) to show a past action has an impact on the present. When using this aspect (it is not a grammatical tense), adverbs are placed following the auxiliary verb. The headline is, therefore, perfectly grammatically accurate.

On topic: it'll be interesting to see what the means in terms of performance.