xion`silo wrote:But that makes it only easier and better for us as PC gamers. If you don't have a computer decent enough to run a game well then you cant really be called a gamer. A gamer normally custom builds their own computers and frequently upgrades them.
A
PC gamer certainly does build their own machines and keep up to date with components, as I said...
Absolute-Zero wrote:I play games on both PC and Console and, in the last few years, have had to upgrade various components a number of times in order to keep up with the latest in PC games. It's cost me a pretty penny to keep up to date.
...but with a console there's no need to spend inordinate amounts of cash constantly bettering your system. As I said, if it says Playstation (or Xbox/Wii) on the box, it'll run on that console, no questions asked. Makes games much more readily available to those who can't always afford to be permanently spending cash to keep a PC up to date.
Both platforms have their upsides and downsides. PCs certainly have more versatility in what they can do and you do have the advantage of being able to replace individual compents rather than the whole unit. Consoles have, traditionally, been more limited and the ability to upgrade them is limited, currently, to replacing the HDD with a bigger unit. However, with the advent of the Next Gen consoles having USB/WiFi/Bluetooth, etc, built in, there's no reason on Earth why you shouldn't be able to plug a keyboard/mouse combo into your console and start playing games with them.
Also, one of the PC's big advantages was the availability of custom content on the Internet. Now consoles have network capability built in, again, there's no reason why such content can't start to appear for them. In fact, most console games are already having maps and upgrades released for them.
I'm not arguing that consoles are better than PCs for gaming, far from it, but each platform has it's advantages and disadvantages and the lines between the two are becoming more blurred as console tech. advances.