Thank you Dennis for saving PC gaming, God bless.
You are very welcome.
Thank you Dennis for saving PC gaming, God bless.
I think it's safe to say that PC gaming is trailing behind looking at these figures from one publisher, while it's doing beter than before it's still get it's arse kicked by ps3/xb360 which is quite frankly embarrassing.
In this thread we will discuss on how PC gaming should approach a console cycle approach like experience to gain growth.
The number one problem with PC gaming is still the fact that a for a beginner it's very hard to get into, Now before we being we must first tell ourselves what a beginner PC person is.
- It is not a person who knows the inards of a PC
- It is not a person who is tech-savy enough to build a PC.
- It is not a person who can tell the difference between enthusiast hardware
- It is not a person who has time and patience to install hardware/software
Now hopefully this has cleared the air and we won't get derailed by comments on how 'easy to build...blah.blah'
Now if a person went into a electronics store they would have no idea on what to buy by looking at the specs, thier best option would be to buy something like this:
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While that PC isn't bad spec-wise, gamers can easily get duped by flashy gear that does not do much, one example:
Not only is the fact that it is a poor gaming pc, the specs will confuse any beginner. A user will buy this hoping to run the latest games and get terrible performance or they will get a game and not understand why it's not running on their system, this is a big turn off for people who are used to games just working, like they do on a console.
The solution?
The easy way to lift this barrier is to ged rid of specs. developers and manufacturers should comply with what they think is the spec for PC games should be that year, for example in 2012 they could assume a dual core with a 1GB GPU with 4GB ram would be sufficient and that would be the baseline standard, but a 2016 PC could be specced as quad core with 8GB ram and 2gb GPU. .They could then label this badge on the PC, stating it's capability:
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But what about if people wanted choice like on a PC?
well we could colour code each year with different colours, even go to the extent of colouring components to match performance to give an idea of people who need to upgrade as well, by albelling them as slow/medium and fast.
4K 45fps GOOD![]()
Okay 1080P 60fps![]()
Slow - 720P![]()
Publishers could comply and start adopting this easy to read format:
The company that could have implemented this was Valve with SteamOS but for some reason they wanted PC builders to do their own thing, which to my knowledge caused more setbacks and confusion and the poor amount of sales of Steamboxes.
The benefits:
- A lot easier for people to buy a gaming pc and understand how it will perform
- publishers and devlopers can understand what systems people will have
- clarifies easily on what games are compatible.
Thoughts? How else could PC gaming be simpllified to beginners?
Jeez, self-centered much, SunnyP?
A i7 is faster than a i5. A i5 is faster than a i3. It's not that complicated.
I thought the only difference between an i7 and an i5 is hyper-threading?
Not really. Quick, go put a PS1 disc in your PS4, see how that goes. At least you can play old games on PC.
At a certain point don't you have to install an older operation system to play a game, say, from the 90s? I want to play my Titanic: Adventure out of Time disc but haven't a clue how.
Screenshots of brute forced graphics always leave me cold. I prefer the more artistic and film-like quality of first party console games. Plus I feel it make for more elegant code when you can't just add more ram to fix a poorly optimized game. Better standards.PC gaming was in dire straits around 2009.
But luckily I saved PC gaming by igniting passion and imagination around the world with my screenshots.
2009-2012 was the era where I had to do the heavy lifting. Now things are more self-sustained but we have to remain vigilant.
People overcomplicate PCs for no reason.
Read a gaming PC guide if you don't know what you're doing.
Drivers haven't been an issue for a decade now. Install your hardware, Windows will take care of almost everything. Install the GPU management software and that will keep you up to date. It's simple. It takes ten minutes. I can honestly bet I could get a game running from installing an OS to launch faster on a PC than a current day console.
Runtimes are installed automatically on Steam and mostly every other launcher.
It's pretty much 2016. These 'PCs are complicated' threads are tired and unfound.
At a certain point don't you have to install an older operation system to play a game, say, from the 90s? I want to play my Titanic: Adventure out of Time disc but haven't a clue how.
Google dosbox. If you can't be arsed to, there are sites that set up old games to run under VMs for you automagically, like GOG
You can run in compatability mode or virtual machine I think.
As a mid-90s to mid-2000s PC Gamer, the one thing that would really get me back is a simplification of the naming and numbering system for video cards and CPUs. Things can get really confusing and unless you don't do the proper research you could possibly be paying more for a product that you think is better but is actually worse than an older, cheaper product.
I want PC gaming to stay with all of it's strength, don't try to be a console. Of course, I like the idea of small-form factor Steam Machines (in fact, I'm interested to get one). Make the U.I simpler, easy settings and all that.
However, PC enthusiasts are those who are interested in thinkering the settings, higher benchmarks, mods, etc... this is the PC gamers market that you should not be ignored.
If it were that simple, that would be awesome. But taking a glance at the "i7" page of NewEgg I can see:
i7-4790K
i7-5820K
i7-5930K
i7-5960X
i7-4790
i7-4790S
i7-4770S
i7-6700
i7-975
i7-4771
i7-870
i7-6700k
Are that many varieties necessary? Then there's that many (or more) of the i5, the i3, the Pentium "Dual Core" models, the Celeron, plus others and AMD's offerings.
I can't tell if Mr Orange is joking or not, it's so dumb. Nobody is going to make those standards, there's no benefit to businesses. For those standards to exist there also wouldn't be a PC platform as it exists today.
How about we stop trying to treat the platform as a fourth console?
PC gaming was in dire straits around 2009.
But luckily I saved PC gaming by igniting passion and imagination around the world with my screenshots.
2009-2012 was the era where I had to do the heavy lifting. Now things are more self-sustained but we have to remain vigilant.
I can't tell if Mr Orange is joking or not, it's so dumb. Nobody is going to make those standards, there's no benefit to businesses. For those standards to exist there also wouldn't be a PC platform as it exists today.
It still have issues compared to consoles though.
Just installed a PCIE soundcard in my new PC, the thing now refuses to shutdown or sleep, its driving me crazy.
This has to be a joke thread.
PC's are the easiest they've ever been to put together and play games on.
A i7 is faster than a i5. A i5 is faster than a i3. It's not that complicated.
It is, but the average consumer would be completely lost. We still get a lot of people here on Gaf in the PC Build thread stating they are scared or worried about doing it on their own because of screwing something up. The average person that does not go on forums and such would be lost in building a PC.
I get what the OP is going for, but not sure if it would be feasible at all. I mean, it would have to come down to a PS4/Xbox One type of system that allows people to get a better processor, ram, gpu for those that want the high end.
Really. All that needs to happen is Publishers need to stop pushing out gimped PC versions.
. People who game on PC do so usually for one or more of the most obvious benefits:.... vast and rapid performance boosts over consoles/swappable hardware components,
not really, Valve released the average specs of the computers linked to steam and the performance of the computers were on par with that of consoles.
Should have used an alias for this MRORANGE.
People overcomplicate PCs for no reason.
But those adopt pc-like practices :/There already is a simplified PC for beginners, it's called a console.
I would argue that it's the manufacturers flooding the market with slightly different pc parts that are overcomplicating the whole thing.
It's far too much research for someone that knows nothing about pc and can be confusing for people that do know about pc.
Also, how much of the console market is being consumed by young kids? I don't expect them to know how to or want to build a pc.
But those adopt pc-like practices :/
When did PC lose momentum?
They're pretty goddamn easy to put together when you have a set of compatible parts. There are PLENTY of resources out there that will help you create that set. It's just a matter of fitting the correct fitting cabled and sliding in cards .. A nine year old could do it.I would argue that it's the manufacturers flooding the market with slightly different pc parts that are overcomplicating the whole thing.
It's far too much research for someone that knows nothing about pc and can be confusing for people that do know about pc.
Also, how much of the console market is being consumed by young kids? I don't expect them to know how to or want to build a pc.
A company needs to change how PCs are built. Make them snap together like Legos or something so upgrading a GPU or ram is super simple. Kinda like how they wanted to make the phoneblocks modular phone.
The idea was tried for arcades.
circa 1997.
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I would argue that it's the manufacturers flooding the market with slightly different pc parts that are overcomplicating the whole thing.
It's far too much research for someone that knows nothing about pc and can be confusing for people that do know about pc.
Also, how much of the console market is being consumed by young kids? I don't expect them to know how to or want to build a pc.
A company needs to change how PCs are built. Make them snap together like Legos or something so upgrading a GPU or ram is super simple. Kinda like how they wanted to make the phoneblocks modular phone.
Unless I'm missing the point of this whole thread and it's going over my head as a joke?