Living in Japan makes it prohibitively costly to put together a gaming PC. Newegg, Tiger Direct...what I wouldn't give for a Japanese equivalent.
Is Tsukumo no longer a good choice there?
That's not a good thing.
Having the option to do something about it means you can have a better experience with the game way faster than if you had to wait for a patch. If you don't want to mess around with settings then you can still play it sub-optimally just like on console.
Sub-optimally is one thing, but quite a few major games launched on PC that would straight-up not launch if your PC had something specific going on with it. A few that impacted me:
- Dark Souls II straight-up wouldn't output right over HDMI when you launched it on certain cards, took a few days for them to fix.
- MGS5: The Phantom Pain crashed on boot if you had a Phenom processor, even though it worked 100% fine with Ground Zeroes
- GTA5 wouldn't work on PC if your Windows username had special characters. This took them a good few days to fix, although at least they allowed no-questions-asked refunds until it was fixed.
For the record, I do still PC game to a certain degree, and I absolutely do see how the option would still be preferable to some, but I shifted from one side to the other and really don't see a situation where I would go back to mainly PC without some pretty massive changes to how things work there. I even have a PC that is explicitly built to game on a living room TV with carefully selected parts and I still have to break out the KB+M to fix some random thing about it way more often than I should.
Other things which I'm sure have been mentioned:
- Cost: Obtaining or building a gaming-level PC outside of the U.S. has a tendency to be quite expensive. To add to this, PC's and PC components are FAR more volatile price-wise than consoles, which tend to be price locked or pretty close to it. Back in 2013 when both PS4 and Xbox One launched the USD and CAD were fairly close to the same value and priced accordingly, so the PS4 had a $399 CAD launch price. Now the CAD value has gone way down, and for example the Switch will be launching at the same price as the PS4, $399 CAD. Note that my salary didn't increase 30% in 3 years so...welp. It's even worse with PC components, by and large any graphics card which is going to be significantly more powerful than a PS4 Pro will be quite a bit more expensive than the PS4 Pro, and again we're talking about just the graphics card here, none of the other components you would also need.
Even outside of hardware, game prices also trend cheaper on the console side in many cases when you factor in, for example, Amazon Prime's 20% off discount, and Amazon at E3 does massive 30% off promotions, and with their pre-order price guarantee you can protect yourself from currency fluctuations. For example I got Resident Evil 7 for PS4 for $57.50 CAD taxes included, which is not only cheaper than Steam and PSN ($79.99CAD) not to mention every other tax-collecting option (over $90 CAD), but even cheaper than Green Man Gaming with the VIP discount (about $65-$67 CAD), AND gives me a copy of the game I can resell or trade or whatever at some point down the line.
And lest we forget that there are some pretty serious titles which don't get PC releases at all.
Again, I absolutely know that PC gaming is preferable to a lot of people, and I can definitely see why, but it's important to realize that the cons of PC gaming which may not be a big deal for you are 100% dealbreakers for a LOT of people. And that's OK. Game on!