Consoles have been every bit as much of a hassle starting last gen and continuing onwards. When you have to wait for patches to download, games to update, and firmware tweaks/fixes/updates and fiddle with entering annoying account details with an analog stick and the A button... you're putting up with all the hassle PC gamers do. Consoles only had that argument when you could literally plug them into the wall, plug them into the TV, put a game in and start playing. Now they're way beyond that, bogged down in so much anti-consumer legwork that it's pretty much an equal pain in the ass.Souplex said:People who want to play PC exclusive games, but don't want to deal with the hassle of gaming on a PC?
Without standard hardware, it might be just as complicated as a real PC.Mr.Tea said:One of the main complaints I hear about PC gaming from console users is that it's "too complicated". They also argue that they prefer the "laying back on a couch" approach over "sitting at a desk". While that's a stupid argument when you consider that there's nothing stopping any PC from being used like that, the argument comes back to "well it's complicated to make that work"...st0pnsw0p said:Who is the Steambox for?
Enter the Steam Machines.
That's it.
If I wanted to put it in much meaner terms, I'd say Valve are merely attempting to get some console dullards over to PC gaming, conveniently bringing them into an ecosystem serviced mostly by them with SteamOS. And for every time that works, it's a new Steam account that's almost guaranteed to buy games.
Hey never mind the fact that its designed to play games for the PC exclusively... I mean if that isn't a sign on the front lawn in big bright letters lit up by floodlights and maybe eternally aflame 40 feet high stating "THIS IS A PC", then I don't think he gets it bud.DoPo said:Simple - then you disappear in a puff of logic.DazZ. said:What happens if I triple boot all three?
While that quote is misattributed - yes. I am not sure why I am required to say it again, but the Steambox is a PC. Therefore, made of PC components. I probably sound like a broken record by this point but it's only because you are relentlessly trying to claim it's not a PC by proving it is. It was a "dedicated" system exactly like gaming PCs, it is capable of being used as a PC and is made of what a PC is made and you made each of this claims. Only to immediately say "therefore, it's not a PC" every time after making those.Eclectic Dreck said:No, by your definition, Steambox is PC components. Remove the custom OS and install Windows and it become a PC because it loses the thing that made it distinct.mohit9206 said:So, basically you are saying hate chocolate nd that you kick puppies for living, right?
You are pretty much failing the duck test here - "It looks like a duck, but it's not a duck. It swims like a duck, but it's not a duck. And quacks like a duck, but it'd not a duck. Then it probably is a duck but it's not a duck."
At any rate, I'd advise against going near zebra crossings - I hear it's dangerous there.
i dunno, i bought and assembled mine for around... £1300 i think. not top top top end, but i've not found a game i can't run maxed out at 60fps yet. i just needed monitor and speakers after that, but as the steam box won't come with those, that's kinda irrelevant =\ the point is, some of these steam machines are $2000 and upwards, i think the top being $6000. that's an insanely high price point, and one i have difficulty seeing the market for.TheSteeleStrap said:It's probably for people who can't afford a gaming PC. They do get quite pricey.
As of 'now' its for Valve. If steam didn't find their own delivery platform and just existed on the 'Windows Store' as an app ( MS friggin copying iTunes) microsoft would end up getting a 30% or something cut of all Steams' sales at least. Who knows what other policies they would enact.st0pnsw0p said:I have no idea who Valve is trying to sell the Steambox to. From what we know about it so far, it's really just a gaming PC in console's clothing. It's not even that, in fact; it's a gaming PC that has less functionality than a normal PC, has access to only a fraction of all PC games, and comes with a weird controller. It has no advantage over PC gaming that I can see, and every advantage it has over consoles is something the PC can do even better. I can't see any reason for PC or console gamers to buy it at the moment unless Valve announces something big.
The use case of the device is it is used in the living room to play PC games. That defines a limited case of utility. A PC, on the other hand, is not explicitly designed to be used in the living room to play PC games - that is just one thing it is capable of doing.DoPo said:While that quote is misattributed - yes. I am not sure why I am required to say it again, but the Steambox is a PC.
The OS is what makes it the dedicated system. The parts are entirely irrelevant in defining a PC. Literally any universal Turing machine is capable of being a PC because it is capable of doing any sort of processing necessary to fill the "general computer use" case yet we choose to not apply that distinction to machines that are, by virtue of OS and use case, intended for some other end.DoPo said:Therefore, made of PC components. I probably sound like a broken record by this point but it's only because you are relentlessly trying to claim it's not a PC by proving it is. It was a "dedicated" system exactly like gaming PCs, it is capable of being used as a PC and is made of what a PC is made and you made each of this claims. Only to immediately say "therefore, it's not a PC" every time after making those.
The better example is this: the PS3 was, at one point, capable of being a PC. You could install your own OS and use it as a desktop if you desired. Then the ability to use that other OS was removed leaving you with just the ps3 OS. The hardware didn't change - just the OS and yet it became firmly "not a PC" as a result.DoPo said:You are pretty much failing the duck test here - "It looks like a duck, but it's not a duck. It swims like a duck, but it's not a duck. And quacks like a duck, but it'd not a duck. Then it probably is a duck but it's not a duck."
So it's a current gen console?st0pnsw0p said:it's a gaming PC that has less functionality than a normal PC
You do realize that that's not how PCs work, right?Eclectic Dreck said:The simplest explanation, however, is this: You advocate taking a PC and putting in an OS that is less capable for most tasks (including gaming), a move that reduces functionality, and then continuing to call it a PC. That's not a duck - that's a platypus.