Neonsilver said:
Phoenixmgs said:
-PC upgrade would be necessary, because due to the new generation, new games would be made to fit them. So they
would require more power from the pc as well
Actually, if you had a pretty decent PC when the next gen consoles came out, you were already running a more powerful system. When the Xbox360/PS3 came out, you would have had to build a pretty expensive computer to match their performance. With this generation, that's absolutely not necessary [http://www.cheatsheet.com/technology/cheap-gaming-pc-builds-to-rival-ps4-and-xbox-one.html/?a=viewall], and it's far cheaper to upgrade that PC in a few years time than it is to buy the next generation of consoles. Plus, you really think you're not getting some extra value out of the increased functionality of a PC?
I got my current PC in the same year that the consoles were released. It had cost me 500-600? I think. Since I had used a Laptop before, I had to pretty much buy an entire PC, otherwise it would have 100-200? less. I waited as long as I could with getting a new machine, but it didn't run games in a satisfactory manner. Otherwise I probably would have waited a little longer. Also I think you misunderstood what I wanted to say. I'm a PC gamer, the last console I played with was the PS2. I tried to explain why I think some developers don't care much about PC gamers. Which in turn makes gamers buy consoles instead of upgrading/buying a PC and thus increasing the numbers of console gamers. And since this lowers the market share of the PC, the developers feel justified about ignoring the PC.
This is my personal opinion, an opinion that is somewhat verified by this thread. I'm aware that this is most likely just a part of the reason, for developers releasing abysmal PC ports.
What I meant with my statement is, the consoles have an upper limit to their performance. You can't upgrade them, you can only tweak the software to get the most out of it. So while the games might become better towards the end, they should still run on a PC (assuming it's properly ported) that ran the games at the beginning of the generation. Or assuming the developers still work more with the previous generation in mind at the beginning, a PC that runs games in the middle of the console lifetime.
Obviously with new consoles the limit that the consoles create gets increased. While a PC can probably still run the new games, the settings for the games will have to be lowered more and more. That is why I consider one PC upgrade necessary for a new console generation. Of course a PC user is a little more flexible about the time of the upgrade compared to a console user.