You can't ever go wrong with the pc though if you don't have the money the ps3 is a good route to go.
Indeed I game on the PS2 and to lesser extent on the PC. I have a laptop though, which isn't the best option for PC gaming. I have a Core i3, 4GB of RAM and more than enough hard drive. OS Windows 7 (64 bits). My main problem has historically lied with graphics requirements, though I got Star Wars ToR to work fine a few months ago so maybe that's over with? I've suffered a lot of disappointments because of graphic requirements that needed video cards and such I never had and were too expensive for me to buy. So I've been more or less shock-conditioned to trust game consoles to play the games that get released on them, as opposed to spending weeks trying to get a game to work on the damn PC.Do4600 said:Yep, me too. I have another confession, I still find plenty of fun in the PS2 games I have. I'm going to stick with my gaming pc and continue to buy consoles ten years after release. My reasoning is that I've never in the past seven years been so bored with my PC that I've felt at a loss for video game entertainment that I felt I needed to have more. I'll still get to play all the good console games, just years after they're hot and most likely at a stupid discount of 90% off. It's not like Silent Hill 2 became a bad game in the seven years it took for me to get around to it after I saw it in a bargain bin for $4.Johnny Novgorod said:Here's an embarrassing confession. I never bought anything beyond a PS2.
The online component worries me though, even for this generation of consoles, it's going to stop at some point, and then will my games suck because I can't download patches for consoles without their servers? I might never buy the next gen if it's online only, it takes the benefit out of buying late.
I was in the same situation that you are in some two years ago. Of course there was no PS4. I had never had a portable device yet. After looking up games for it and seeing that my favourite genres, the JRPGs and platformers were so scarce on the home console market, I decided to buy a Nintendo DS. I bought a DSi for some insane reason I still don't fully comprehend, but it was still worth it. I played some good Mario games, I played some great RPGs, such as the Dragon Quest DS offerings, and I still have a very rich library to choose from.Johnny Novgorod said:Here's an embarrassing confession. I never bought anything beyond a PS2. Basically I've always stayed one generation behind, buying a PS1 when the PS2 came out, and buying a PS2 when the PS3 was released. Because of gild I guess. Also the PS2 has such an awesome game library that the urge to stay updated more or less died out (and I've yet to play through all the games I own for it).
Anyway, I think it's about time I move on. Now everybody's talking about the upcoming generation, but nobody's very sure about the PS4 and the Xbox Whatever. So I don't know what to do, do I buy into the current generation (PS3, Xbox 360) or skip it altogether and keep saving for the upcoming one?
I'm adding a poll but I would really appreciate if you took a minute of your time to illustrate your choice.
Yes, the problem with laptops is that you can't really upgrade the video card so you'll be stuck in whatever generation you bought it in and to really upgrade your performance you need to buy a new laptop. It's sort of the console of the pc world. The CPU in my desktop is something like five years old, but I replaced the graphics card a year ago and now I'm playing brand new games on maximum. It's the video card that matters most, and if it can't be replaced you're stuck.Johnny Novgorod said:Indeed I game on the PS2 and to lesser extent on the PC. I have a laptop though, which isn't the best option for PC gaming. I have a Core i3, 4GB of RAM and more than enough hard drive. OS Windows 7 (64 bits). My main problem has historically lied with graphics requirements, though I got Star Wars ToR to work fine a few months ago so maybe that's over with? I've suffered a lot of disappointments because of graphic requirements that needed video cards and such I never had and were too expensive for me to buy. So I've been more or less shock-conditioned to trust game consoles to play the games that get released on them, as opposed to spending weeks trying to get a game to work on the damn PC.Do4600 said:Yep, me too. I have another confession, I still find plenty of fun in the PS2 games I have. I'm going to stick with my gaming pc and continue to buy consoles ten years after release. My reasoning is that I've never in the past seven years been so bored with my PC that I've felt at a loss for video game entertainment that I felt I needed to have more. I'll still get to play all the good console games, just years after they're hot and most likely at a stupid discount of 90% off. It's not like Silent Hill 2 became a bad game in the seven years it took for me to get around to it after I saw it in a bargain bin for $4.Johnny Novgorod said:Here's an embarrassing confession. I never bought anything beyond a PS2.
The online component worries me though, even for this generation of consoles, it's going to stop at some point, and then will my games suck because I can't download patches for consoles without their servers? I might never buy the next gen if it's online only, it takes the benefit out of buying late.
I made a thread in the Advice Forum about this but I wanted to ask you, with a Core i3 processor, 4GB of RAM and a crappy Intel HD Graphics Family video card, what would be the range of games I could play? Roughly? Like, will that run Gen. VII? Up to what year, more or less?Do4600 said:Yes, the problem with laptops is that you can't really upgrade the video card so you'll be stuck in whatever generation you bought it in and to really upgrade your performance you need to buy a new laptop. It's sort of the console of the pc world. The CPU in my desktop is something like five years old, but I replaced the graphics card a year ago and now I'm playing brand new games on maximum. It's the video card that matters most, and if it can't be replaced your stuck.Johnny Novgorod said:Indeed I game on the PS2 and to lesser extent on the PC. I have a laptop though, which isn't the best option for PC gaming. I have a Core i3, 4GB of RAM and more than enough hard drive. OS Windows 7 (64 bits). My main problem has historically lied with graphics requirements, though I got Star Wars ToR to work fine a few months ago so maybe that's over with? I've suffered a lot of disappointments because of graphic requirements that needed video cards and such I never had and were too expensive for me to buy. So I've been more or less shock-conditioned to trust game consoles to play the games that get released on them, as opposed to spending weeks trying to get a game to work on the damn PC.Do4600 said:Yep, me too. I have another confession, I still find plenty of fun in the PS2 games I have. I'm going to stick with my gaming pc and continue to buy consoles ten years after release. My reasoning is that I've never in the past seven years been so bored with my PC that I've felt at a loss for video game entertainment that I felt I needed to have more. I'll still get to play all the good console games, just years after they're hot and most likely at a stupid discount of 90% off. It's not like Silent Hill 2 became a bad game in the seven years it took for me to get around to it after I saw it in a bargain bin for $4.Johnny Novgorod said:Here's an embarrassing confession. I never bought anything beyond a PS2.
The online component worries me though, even for this generation of consoles, it's going to stop at some point, and then will my games suck because I can't download patches for consoles without their servers? I might never buy the next gen if it's online only, it takes the benefit out of buying late.
It depends on the model of the graphics card, it's all important really, the difference between a Intel HD Graphics 2500 and an Intel HD Graphics 4000 is huge. Also it depends on how the graphics scale in a particular game. For instance, if you want to play Bioshock: Infinite without trying to change every config file you need a more powerful video card. However, anything made by Blizzard you shouldn't have a problem with, because they make the graphics so scaleable that you could literally play almost every game they have made on a machine made in 2005.Johnny Novgorod said:I made a thread in the Advice Forum about this but I wanted to ask you, with a Core i3 processor, 4GB of RAM and a crappy Intel HD Graphics Family video card, what would be the range of games I could play? Roughly? Like, will that run Gen. VII? Up to what year, more or less?Do4600 said:Yes, the problem with laptops is that you can't really upgrade the video card so you'll be stuck in whatever generation you bought it in and to really upgrade your performance you need to buy a new laptop. It's sort of the console of the pc world. The CPU in my desktop is something like five years old, but I replaced the graphics card a year ago and now I'm playing brand new games on maximum. It's the video card that matters most, and if it can't be replaced your stuck.Johnny Novgorod said:Indeed I game on the PS2 and to lesser extent on the PC. I have a laptop though, which isn't the best option for PC gaming. I have a Core i3, 4GB of RAM and more than enough hard drive. OS Windows 7 (64 bits). My main problem has historically lied with graphics requirements, though I got Star Wars ToR to work fine a few months ago so maybe that's over with? I've suffered a lot of disappointments because of graphic requirements that needed video cards and such I never had and were too expensive for me to buy. So I've been more or less shock-conditioned to trust game consoles to play the games that get released on them, as opposed to spending weeks trying to get a game to work on the damn PC.Do4600 said:Yep, me too. I have another confession, I still find plenty of fun in the PS2 games I have. I'm going to stick with my gaming pc and continue to buy consoles ten years after release. My reasoning is that I've never in the past seven years been so bored with my PC that I've felt at a loss for video game entertainment that I felt I needed to have more. I'll still get to play all the good console games, just years after they're hot and most likely at a stupid discount of 90% off. It's not like Silent Hill 2 became a bad game in the seven years it took for me to get around to it after I saw it in a bargain bin for $4.Johnny Novgorod said:Here's an embarrassing confession. I never bought anything beyond a PS2.
The online component worries me though, even for this generation of consoles, it's going to stop at some point, and then will my games suck because I can't download patches for consoles without their servers? I might never buy the next gen if it's online only, it takes the benefit out of buying late.
I've got Intel HD Graphics 3000. So far the most updated game I've played on the PC has been The Old Republic, which I think is from 2011. I'm not really expecting to play something released yesterday, a few Gen. VII games would be nice is all but I tire from fooling around with the settings and configs, I waste days at a time trying to get a single game working.Do4600 said:It depends on the model of the graphics card, it's all important really, the difference between a Intel HD Graphics 2500 and an Intel HD Graphics 4000 is huge. Also it depends on how the graphics scale in a particular game. For instance, if you want to play Bioshock: Infinite without trying to change every config file you need a more powerful video card. However, anything made by Blizzard you shouldn't have a problem with, because they make the graphics so scaleable that you could literally play almost every game they have made on a machine made in 2005.Johnny Novgorod said:I made a thread in the Advice Forum about this but I wanted to ask you, with a Core i3 processor, 4GB of RAM and a crappy Intel HD Graphics Family video card, what would be the range of games I could play? Roughly? Like, will that run Gen. VII? Up to what year, more or less?Do4600 said:Yes, the problem with laptops is that you can't really upgrade the video card so you'll be stuck in whatever generation you bought it in and to really upgrade your performance you need to buy a new laptop. It's sort of the console of the pc world. The CPU in my desktop is something like five years old, but I replaced the graphics card a year ago and now I'm playing brand new games on maximum. It's the video card that matters most, and if it can't be replaced your stuck.Johnny Novgorod said:Indeed I game on the PS2 and to lesser extent on the PC. I have a laptop though, which isn't the best option for PC gaming. I have a Core i3, 4GB of RAM and more than enough hard drive. OS Windows 7 (64 bits). My main problem has historically lied with graphics requirements, though I got Star Wars ToR to work fine a few months ago so maybe that's over with? I've suffered a lot of disappointments because of graphic requirements that needed video cards and such I never had and were too expensive for me to buy. So I've been more or less shock-conditioned to trust game consoles to play the games that get released on them, as opposed to spending weeks trying to get a game to work on the damn PC.Do4600 said:Yep, me too. I have another confession, I still find plenty of fun in the PS2 games I have. I'm going to stick with my gaming pc and continue to buy consoles ten years after release. My reasoning is that I've never in the past seven years been so bored with my PC that I've felt at a loss for video game entertainment that I felt I needed to have more. I'll still get to play all the good console games, just years after they're hot and most likely at a stupid discount of 90% off. It's not like Silent Hill 2 became a bad game in the seven years it took for me to get around to it after I saw it in a bargain bin for $4.Johnny Novgorod said:Here's an embarrassing confession. I never bought anything beyond a PS2.
The online component worries me though, even for this generation of consoles, it's going to stop at some point, and then will my games suck because I can't download patches for consoles without their servers? I might never buy the next gen if it's online only, it takes the benefit out of buying late.
Check this site out: http://www.notebookcheck.net/Intel-HD-Graphics-2500.69812.0.html