BathorysGraveland2 said:I have no interest in consoles (besides the humorous wars and drama that they generate), so I guess that applies to me. I don't really upgrade my computer though, haven't since 2009. It still plays most of the games I am interesting in, and I can handle more modern ones on moderate settings no problem. Money is always an issue, too.
On top of that, the real reasons why I haven't bothered with consoles for year is the majority of the games I play are either exclusive to PC or just handle better on PC. Besides, I feel a lot more comfortable with a keyboard and mouse than I do a controller. So there's that, too.
I do enjoy the console wars though. They are fun to watch, seeing all the butthurt and drama and shit.
Go to gog.com. They sell the oldies in working form.Ren_Li said:I've actually never been a PC gamer- literally the only game I've ever played on PC is Neverwinter Nights. The first one.
But I plan to change that. I can't see that the PS4 will be releasing enough games to justify buying a new console, when I can have a huge selection of PC games available to me, and can use it for other things as well that my old laptop has trouble with.
...That is, assuming I can get old games like NWN, KotOR, etc to run on it. The beauty of console gaming is, for someone who didn't grow up with PCs and doesn't really understand them, there's no worries about tech. Just... pop the disk in and go. The fact that the next gen of consoles has pushed me to the point that learning enough about a PC to know how to upgrade it and how to make it play both old and new games says a lot about what they're doing wrong.
(If that was even coherent.)
Half right. A decent entry level tablet would be more like $200, with $400 being pretty high end for an ARM based tablet. The only kind of tablet that goes much over that are high end Windows 8 ones on X86 based hardware.RoBi3.0 said:Wow, this maybe be the most hyperbolic statement I have read on the Internet all week. Both PS4 and Xbox one far surpass general tablets in power and gaming functionality. Plus a decent entry level tablet runs around 400 dollars or more depending on brand. Honestly nothing in the above statement makes sense.Ultratwinkie said:Why would I shell out 400$ for what amounts to a tablet? Because Sony put Final Fantasy on it?
.
OT: I am going to do what I did last generation. I am going to buy consoles and upgrade my PC as it makes sense to do so. Eventually I will end up with every next-gen platform, though I see this taking several year unless I win the lottery.
Fair enough. I don't pay much attention to the lower end of tablets.Owyn_Merrilin said:Half right. A decent entry level tablet would be more like $200, with $400 being pretty high end for an ARM based tablet. The only kind of tablet that goes much over that are high end Windows 8 ones on X86 based hardware.RoBi3.0 said:Wow, this maybe be the most hyperbolic statement I have read on the Internet all week. Both PS4 and Xbox one far surpass general tablets in power and gaming functionality. Plus a decent entry level tablet runs around 400 dollars or more depending on brand. Honestly nothing in the above statement makes sense.Ultratwinkie said:Why would I shell out 400$ for what amounts to a tablet? Because Sony put Final Fantasy on it?
.
OT: I am going to do what I did last generation. I am going to buy consoles and upgrade my PC as it makes sense to do so. Eventually I will end up with every next-gen platform, though I see this taking several year unless I win the lottery.
Well, that and the iPad, but that's because Apple is like Bose; you're paying for the name, not the hardware.