Still looks awesome too despite all these newer gen games being released in the meanwhile.
best looking skyboxes(dat São Paulo skyline at night) this side of bungie, that and the attention to detail in the environments is god-tier
Still looks awesome too despite all these newer gen games being released in the meanwhile.
We need a new PC but it will be for family stuff and not gaming.
I really want to build my own Steam box for the living room but it's just too much of a time investment right now. I barely have time to play my consoles from ten years ago, let alone a schnazzy new gaming PC.
I meant it's a petty way to just dismiss its library, and what it really means is : "I don't want one because I can't be bothered to learn anything about it"I don't know what you mean by 'dignify that the platform exists'. If you mean 'acknowledge its existence', I don't think anyone is denying it's existence, so I think I'm misunderstanding this.
Yeah I've been cautiously watching that thread, and considering it for when I start thinking about my TV-only gaming PC in a few months. It's still intimidating but I think I'll give it a shot at that time. Thanks!
Both of you should stop by the PC thread. The folks in there have to be the most even keeled and helpful community on the net.I'm hoping to restart and buy a new one (or rather, build) this year for Alien Isolation. Haven't upgraded my PC since 2010 and it's time to.
My wallet is terrified.
Best reason, IMO. Gaming time for me is as much about hanging with pals as much as it is playing games. Not having a community on a gaming platform would be a huge obstacle for me. Hell, if I were being truly honest with myself, this is probably the biggest reason why I continue to play PC and will into the future. Well that, and the low 30 and 60 fps frame rates. Gotta have dat 120.- I've got more friends on consoles
Google "need a new PC".We need a new PC but it will be for family stuff and not gaming.
I really want to build my own Steam box for the living room but it's just too much of a time investment right now. I barely have time to play my consoles from ten years ago, let alone a schnazzy new gaming PC.
I actually don't think it's a very good reason, and I say this as someone who right now has almost all his "gaming friends" as PC gamers.Best reason, IMO. Gaming time for me is as much about hanging with pals as much as it is playing games.
But all of my best friends play PC games. It's what has held us all together for 18 years.I actually don't think it's a very good reason, and I say this as someone who right now has almost all his "gaming friends" as PC gamers.
I'm confident that I would find people to play with regardless of which platform I would buy.
I wouldn't let my friends decide what I'm going to play anyway. If anything, I'm going to be the one making the choice and telling them where they can find me.
You can get Borderlands 2 for like 15 bucksIs there a 399 dollar white pc in the form factor of a ps4 that I can play Destiny on today?
Is there a 399 dollar white pc in the form factor of a ps4 that I can play Destiny on today?
Consoles are more plug and play than PC's, at least to my experience. only for the first setup, but generally yes
I prefer console exclusive games over PC style games. // What are those 'PC style games' You're talking about?
More Japanese games and Japanese exclusives. // true for some platforms
I do not like playing games on a mouse and keyboard. // almost all new games support controllers or can be configured with one
Having to worry about specifications and upgrading whenever new games come out. // obsolete issue since 2007
Less glitches and errors to deal with. // not true from my experience with PS3
Except 3D platformers :'("pc doesn't have the exclusives I like on consoles" is an excuse to buy a console, not an excuse to not buy a PC
Pc gaming has exclusives for all tastes, every genre is covered... and all of them have great games in them.
Except 3D platformers :'(
Except 3D platformers :'(
That's exactly why I switched from PC to console two years ago.I chose a console because it's cheaper to game on consoles = not true so it's not a reason.
That's exactly why I switched from PC to console two years ago.
I finished 83 games last year and I'm at 44 thus far this year.Do You play one game a year?
I finished 83 games last year and I'm at 44 thus far this year.
?So Your math regarding cost of gaming on platforms is completely wrong.
So Your math regarding cost of gaming on platforms is completely wrong.
There is no way, that with so many bought titles You could go cheaper with any console.
On a side note, a Mac is a PC too.Have never felt the need to own a PC for gaming, tere's just no reason for me to get one All my work is done on Macs and there is no reason for me to change that either.
^If they like me liberally used gamefly they could. I'd rather pay for gamefly and get new releases week 1-3 than buy it for 50% 6 months later on steam.
Because I don't want to be tempted with upgrading. Don't have the money. I don't even want to be bothered that my friend bought more RAM or a better graphics card or a better processor or new OS or new keyboard. I spent $400 on a PS4 and won't pay for any other upgrade for about 6 years. Could you do the same (read: not be tempted) with your PC?
You can buy new releases for 35-40$ or less on PC.If they like me liberally used gamefly they could. I'd rather pay for gamefly and get new releases week 1-3 than buy it for 50% 6 months later on steam.
Also buying a game day one on console means you can still usually get back 60-75% back when you sell it (not to GameStop), if I buy shadow of mordor day 1 on steam and don't like it/am done fast I don't get to recoup 35-45$ like I can on console.
Any multiplatform game that uses a controller is better for me on ps4 due to remote play.
I'd rather play a game at a lower resolution than give up remote play which is how I sneak in 50%+ of my ps4 gaming in.
The only games I miss out on I catch 3 years late for a dollar on steam on my piece of shit PC in my office.
The worst thing that could happen is your games being only a little better than the console versions...
The worst thing that could happen is your games being only a little better than the console versions...
Depends on your titles and current specs. Check the "I need a new PC Thread" and run Speccy.Disclaimer: I'm not very well familiar with PC gaming community, so please don't kill me. ;(
I have one, but it's pre-built. I know it's ridiculous to do that, but I'm not very well versed into PC building.
Right now, I want to upgrade my pre-built PC, but there's two obstacles: One, should I upgrade the GPU or should I upgrade the other components as well?
Two, yes, laugh all you want, it's money. But let me explain, I live in the UAE. A dollar is worth a 3.67 . If I wanna buy... say a 300$/400$ GPU, that amounts to 1101/1470 and that sounds expensive as hell as far as I'm concerned.
Besides, I'm trying not to burn all the money I have as I use them for my life luxuries.
I think he's implying that PC releases are often 15-30% cheaper at or close to launch with lower sale prices later.
A lot of people stick to upgrading the mid-high ~$250 card every 2-3 generations. It's the most popular purchase point.Because I don't want to be tempted with upgrading. Don't have the money. I don't even want to be bothered that my friend bought more RAM or a better graphics card or a better processor or new OS or new keyboard. I spent $400 on a PS4 and won't pay for any other upgrade for about 6 years. Could you do the same (read: not be tempted) with your PC?
It's a project but Hackintosh's are capable machines if you ever want to take a look into that.Have never felt the need to own a PC for gaming, tere's just no reason for me to get one All my work is done on Macs and there is no reason for me to change that either.
It really is that simple for me, don't want one, don't need one so don't have one.
Shield doesn't even remotely compare to Remote Play imo. Thing is like a tank.Nvidia shield does exist btw. How exactly do you use remote play? Just curious.
The Mac being a PC is clearly why it was included in this thread with me then qualifying the comment by saying I don't use it for games. That's in comparison to my freezer which I also don't play games on but I chose not to mention it here due to it not being a PC.On a side note, a Mac is a PC too.
One with an extraordinarily limited versatility and poor cost-for-power ratio, butt still a PC.
I'm glad you just assumed that I'm either incapable of basic accounting or full of shit.There is no way, that with so many bought titles You could go cheaper with any console.
Well, for two reasons:I think he's implying that PC releases are often 15-30% cheaper at or close to launch with lower sale prices later.
Doesn't take into account buying/selling used and rental services of course.
Because I don't want to be tempted with upgrading. Don't have the money.
Different people go about the hobby in different ways. A large majority of my console games are either 1 or 2 day Redbox rentals ($2-$4) or from online buying and reselling (<$5-10 cost).Well, for two reasons:
the first is that even taking into account the used market, software on PC is cheaper anyway.
I can typically find (almost) any game i want at day one on PC for less that I would pay it used two months later on a console from the nearest Gamestop.
The second one is that reselling every single one of your games to buy the next one with the "credit" is not a great argument for convenience of console games, since in the end you will have a collection of software on one side and just few bucks of store credit and the latest release on the other.
I'm glad you just assumed that I'm either incapable of basic accounting or full of shit.![]()
I actually went back and counted. 57 of the 83 games I finished in 2013 were physical. I kept nine of them after completion (999, the five English AA games, TWEWY, SMT4, and Chrono Trigger) and sold the rest. I made a profit on 45 of those games and took a loss of $2.62 on the remaining one. Some of these were token profits, to be sure, but you'd be surprised by how much money you can make at times - for example, Assassin's Creed III netted me $37.
The intuition here is that I don't replay games all that frequently - I'd rather spend my time with something new. Given that, I don't find all that much value in keeping a digital library - for digital-only games, sure, but if it's something I can get physically and sell for more than I bought it for, I'm going with that.
On a side note, a Mac is a PC too.
One with an extraordinarily limited versatility and poor cost-for-power ratio, butt still a PC.
Person who has no actual familiarity with PC software pricing spotted
750Ti and doneI just bought an Alienware X51 R2 for $800. I'm satisfied with it, but seems I might've been able to do better, I dunno. I'd rather not deal with building and setting one up, I'd rather just buy one. This comes with a GeForce GTX 645 which is... quite weak. It's enough to play most modern games with good settings, but I sure as hell ain't maxing anything out or hitting solid 60fps on good settings.
Checking Steam right now...
Fable Anniversary - $27.99 on sale
Dead Rising 3 - $49.99
DayZ- $29.99
Shadow of Mordor $49.99
Monaco: What's yours is mine - $3.74 on sale
Just checking prices on games shared with consoles. Haven't checked Origin, but I do know I haven't seen Titanfall on PC for under $20, which happens to be the lowest I've seen the console version. What's the current price of Plants vs Zombies Garden Warfare? The cheapest I've seen is $20 for the PC version, while console versions have been $20-$30. For the extra $10 I'll gladly take a physical copy I can sell off should I desire.
No doubt you can game for cheap if you're looking to play old games, but then the same can be said for consoles.