At the heart of this, I feel, is that most people are simply comfortable with what they're accustomed to and don't particularly want to change. Why should they? If you're perfectly satisfied with what you're doing, then keep doing it.
This property is not specific to console gamers, or to gamers generally. People, in general, get accustomed to things and then grow particularly fond of them. This can be seen with musical tastes (classical fans of the 1900s thinking of Jazz as just noise, etc), and with movie tastes (I can say that many of my friends have a particular fondness for dudebro Arnold/Stallone movies they grew up with) and a variety of other things.
And I want to point out that this is fine. It's also fine that today's kids are growing up with iPads and don't have the hatred for touch-based gaming that many members of NeoGAF do. Ultimately, I think many people start from this position -- the position of "this is what I am accustomed to" -- and then come up with arguments to defend that position, when it would really be fine to just say "I've been playing on consoles for years and it's just what I'm used to," or "I grew up playing on PC and the traditional console controller feels sort of weird to me."
I think a number of the more preposterous arguments against PC (and against handhelds and so forth) spring from this problem. People don't want to say "Well, I'm just used to consoles," so they start insisting that PC games have angular angles or that PC exclusives lack gravitas, when they really don't need to. If you grew up playing the SNES and then Playstation and then PS2 and then PS3, and now you're sort of invested in Sony's exclusives and have acquired a taste for the sorts of games on those platforms, more power to you.
This property is not specific to console gamers, or to gamers generally. People, in general, get accustomed to things and then grow particularly fond of them. This can be seen with musical tastes (classical fans of the 1900s thinking of Jazz as just noise, etc), and with movie tastes (I can say that many of my friends have a particular fondness for dudebro Arnold/Stallone movies they grew up with) and a variety of other things.
And I want to point out that this is fine. It's also fine that today's kids are growing up with iPads and don't have the hatred for touch-based gaming that many members of NeoGAF do. Ultimately, I think many people start from this position -- the position of "this is what I am accustomed to" -- and then come up with arguments to defend that position, when it would really be fine to just say "I've been playing on consoles for years and it's just what I'm used to," or "I grew up playing on PC and the traditional console controller feels sort of weird to me."
I think a number of the more preposterous arguments against PC (and against handhelds and so forth) spring from this problem. People don't want to say "Well, I'm just used to consoles," so they start insisting that PC games have angular angles or that PC exclusives lack gravitas, when they really don't need to. If you grew up playing the SNES and then Playstation and then PS2 and then PS3, and now you're sort of invested in Sony's exclusives and have acquired a taste for the sorts of games on those platforms, more power to you.