Besides, if PC gaming is what kills consoles, mobile gaming is what will kill PC gaming.
I highlighted the most important phrase.Again, we come to the fundamental crux of the matter. A PC as a first choice platform is that of an enthusiast. What you're basically saying is you are ignorant to the workings of a PC at the most simplistic level and do not want to spend even the most remote amount of time to understand them. Your interest in the medium is not invested enough to deem performance, variety, customisation, modding or the long term price implication worth spending the time to learn the most entry level elements of a computer.
That is your choice, but people need to stop passing off their own inability or unwillingness to educate themselves as some form of incredible barrier of complexity, inherent to the PC. It simply, is not true.
I highlighted the most important phrase.
The non-enthusiasts are the majority. They want to be entertained, not educated.
And all you need is to say "I prefer to play games on a PC", and that's ferfectly fine.This is fine, but there are some who insist on making up horseshit about computers to justify their position. All they need to say is "I prefer to play games on a console."
computers are amazing, they are elite, the master race I know this but just prefer to game on consoles.This is fine, but there are some who insist on making up horseshit about computers to justify their position. All they need to say is "I prefer to play games on a console."
I highlighted the most important phrase.
The non-enthusiasts are the majority. They want to be entertained, not educated.
I suspect there's a vast number of people who like to use this 'PC's are too complicated' justification for why they choose to game on consoles are just using it because its a popular argument. We all like to justify shit to ourselves, but yea, in truth, I'm pretty sure most would have little to no trouble with the ease of use in PC gaming and many would probably come to enjoy the *optional* configurability that is involved. Tailoring games to how you want them to be is really such a wonderful thing for a gaming enthusiast. And its not difficult. This is where most of the problems do come up, granted, but its only occasional and again, its optional stuff. There's nothing stopping you from just installing a game and playing. You will rarely encounter any noteworthy issues if that's all you want to do these days.Your comment is incorrect. You are countering my point from a perspective of a buyer being affected. I wasn't saying a PC is an education device in comparison to a console, which is an entertainment device. I was saying that if a person is not swamped in ignorant misconceptions about the complexity of a PC, which requires a completely acceptable amount of research to alleviate, an amount you would expect from anyone willing to spend upwards of £300 on a product, they would realise it is a much better investment if they are really avid game fans.
Jeff is supposed to be a very informed gaffer especially in the hardware side (if am not mistaken) but still i disagree with you
In a one operating system future, Nintendo wouldn't need to disappear. Nintendo could still design and distribute hardware, they could still have their own e-shop, they could still design peripherals based on the hardware they've set as a target. Hell, Nintendo could even design their own OS if they wanted to, and just have the framework be based on the "standard".
I like having a system that is simple and easy to understand. At least I know games will run exactly the same on every ps4, whereas I have to take a number of factors into mind when purchasing a pc game. I doubt I'm the only person that thinks this way.
You're not lucky. You're just not bafflingly exaggerating that one time you had an issue and trying to pass it off like every single game takes an hour just to get it working ok.I feel like I must have the greatest luck ever with PC games. I just buy them on Steam and play them. I think I've got new graphics drivers maybe 3 times in the last 2 years and it wasn't out of necessity. I only tweak games, because I want to. Pretty much every game I've gotten sets itself to an automatic setting based on my hardware and is perfectly playable.
You're not lucky. You're just not bafflingly exaggerating that one time you had an issue and trying to pass it off like every single game takes an hour just to get it working ok.
Also, yes, if you are trying to tweak things by going into config files and ini's and modifying the game in order to get the maximum out of the game and your system, you will likely run into issues here and there. But this stuff isn't necessary.
The ecosystem created by Microsoft and Sony would allow them to continue to sell games and services.....if you haven't seen this then you aren't dialed into gaming on Current consoles. Microsoft plans to sell games to all Windows 10 platforms with an additional on-line charge for multi-player...is a phone or tablet a game console?With out the licensing fees they get for games released on their system there's no point to this. It is never going to happen.
Unless the game was Dark Souls and used GFWL.
Getting that to run was a massive headache.
I suspect there's a vast number of people who like to use this 'PC's are too complicated' justification for why they choose to game on consoles are just using it because its a popular argument. We all like to justify shit to ourselves, but yea, in truth, I'm pretty sure most would have little to no trouble with the ease of use in PC gaming and many would probably come to enjoy the *optional* configurability that is involved. Tailoring games to how you want them to be is really such a wonderful thing for a gaming enthusiast. And its not difficult. This is where most of the problems do come up, granted, but its only occasional and again, its optional stuff. There's nothing stopping you from just installing a game and playing. You will rarely encounter any noteworthy issues if that's all you want to do these days.
The ecosystem created by Microsoft and Sony would allow them to continue to sell games and services.....if you haven't seen this then you aren't dialed into gaming on Current consoles. Microsoft plans to sell games to all Windows 10 platforms with an additional on-line charge for multi-player...is a phone or tablet a game console?
Microsoft stopped charging for Xbox on-line and now follows Sony's lead in charging only for multi-player on-line games. Microsoft rumored to not charge for Windows 10 may be for the same reason and that is:
1) DLNA CVP2 where every Xbox and every Windows 10 platform can support connecting to the Cable TV living room DVR and eventually a Cable Modem to watch TV. The general public will not stand for a separate charge to Watch TV in addition to what they pay for the Internet and Cable TV. Since VOD IPTV is also available with DLNA CVP2 they can't separate the Cable TV VOD from a service like Netflix.
2) The public also won't pay for an OS on a PC connected to the living room TV when everyone else provides it free.
If today it's announced that a entry level Windows 10 is free, it supports but doesn't guarantee this thread that Microsoft is counting on first Xbox 1 then PCs connected to living room TVs with a transition for gaming to PCs sometime after 2016 when the price of a mid performance PC as listed in the OP drops and can run AAA console like games in the living room.
We will have to see what the Windows 10 Xbox app supports and I suspect it brings the Xbox store and ecosystem to the PC and other Windows 10 platforms. I suspect many of the coming Xbox 1 games will be able to run on PCs and for sure there are plans for many cross platform games that will run on Windows 10 platforms including phones. Game streaming between XB1 and PC is also mentioned with there being no reason that game streaming can't be to any Windows 10 platform from a PC or the XB1.
Eventually PCs as DLNA CVP2 living room client, DVR, media hub and AAA game servers to other platforms becomes a large enough demographic to support eliminating the Xbox as a separate Game Console line.
You're not lucky. You're just not bafflingly exaggerating that one time you had an issue and trying to pass it off like every single game takes an hour just to get it working ok.
These games, you literally had trouble getting them to run at all, or just get them to run as well as you'd like?And you are downplaying just how many games have issues trying to get to run.
Off the top of my head, in the last couple years, I've had serious issues with Portal 2, Dungeon Defenders, Skyrim, Fallout 3, Dead Rising 3, Titanfall, and Star Wars: The Old Republic.
Just how many of these do I have to have before I profess that PC gaming is, in fact, not as simple as PC enthusiasts want to make it out to be?
This is a really stupid thread...
PCs will NEVER move to living rooms. Period.
I disagree with the OP specific points, but I don't think we are as far off from the death of traditional consoles as people think. This doesn't mean video game consoles will die per se, but the market will be marginalized and will likely be changed beyond recognition. There was a time in history when flight and space simulators were the most popular games to buy on PC. These did not appeal to a young demographic, that's why historically PC gaming has skewed towards older people - look up old issues of Computer Gaming World if you can to see this. Great games but the flight sim market could not find a way to reach younger people as PC gaming got younger. As a result, you saw developers drop out of the industry and the flight sim genre - while it still exists, is not a major driving force in PC gaming like it used to be.
Consoles are appealing to an increasingly narrower and narrower demographic. It's not shrinking - yet. According to the ESA, the average gamer is now 30 years old - that's around the age when people start to generate serious disposable income. That's why I think the market is still growing while paradoxically getting older. For gamers under 18, 45-50% of them are female. I don't see a single thing in 2015 that traditional gaming market is doing to reach women to insure that they'll remain gamers at 25 and beyond. Same with kids, I don't see a lot of stuff being marketed to the under 13 crowd that will ensure that kids will grow up with traditional gaming.
Instead what I'm seeing is an industry that is dedicated to sequels and HD Remakes. Which makes sense - the average gamer is 30. 15 years ago, they were playing Halo it would make sense to appeal to their sense of nostalgia. I haven't seen many attempts by traditional companies to create franchises that appeal to today's 8 and 9 year olds so they will be nostalgic for them in 2030. Nintendo is trying but I'm not sure if they're reaching that demographic.
And this is a problem because gaming is not a hobby that people just pick up in their mid 20's and 30's. That means the market ages, more people are going to be dropping out than coming in.
The reason why I think this? I grew up a PC gamer and what I saw happen to the PC game market over the last 20 years, I'm seeing happen to console gaming today. Demographic getting older, developers dropping out of the market, younger gamers being attracted to different devices etc.
I suspect there's a vast number of people who like to use this 'PC's are too complicated' justification for why they choose to game on consoles are just using it because its a popular argument. We all like to justify shit to ourselves, but yea, in truth, I'm pretty sure most would have little to no trouble with the ease of use in PC gaming and many would probably come to enjoy the *optional* configurability that is involved. Tailoring games to how you want them to be is really such a wonderful thing for a gaming enthusiast. And its not difficult. This is where most of the problems do come up, granted, but its only occasional and again, its optional stuff. There's nothing stopping you from just installing a game and playing. You will rarely encounter any noteworthy issues if that's all you want to do these days.
I still can't even run the Steamworks version. I'm glad they removed GFWL so that I could not play Dark Souls.
PC gaming has never been easier than it has today, however it still isn't at the level where it needs to be for most folk.
Sure that's true but most people try to pay as little as they can for their hardware. Just the other day I had to explain to a mother and her 12 year old daughter that her laptop wasn't powerful enough to run the new Sims game.ITT: Hyperboles EVERYWHERE. PC? Oh so DIFFICULT....! OMG, it's so difficult that I can't even find the power buttooon! Oh NOOOOOOO! lol
There are more computers among "folks" out there than there are consoles. If people are able to log in and use their online banks, they are more than likely able figure out that to play a game on Steam they need to click on the (basically) two "buy" and "play" buttons..
There are more computers among "folks" out there than there are consoles. If people are able to log in and use their online banks, they are more than likely able figure out that to play a game on Steam they need to click on the (basically) two "buy" and "play" buttons..
Are you Two? Just missing the text formatting and blue links complaints added to the walls of text.You're wrong, you don't understand the consumer or what you're talking about, and all you do is write walls of text. Just stop.
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http://www.zdnet.com/article/how-much-does-microsoft-make-from-pc-makers-with-windows-8-1/ said:But if the company continues along the path it set with Windows 8.1, the company will likely continue to forego once-hefty OEM per-copy charges and hope to make up the difference with attached services, moving forward.
Are you Two? Just missing the text formatting and blue links complaints added to the walls of text.
No I'm not 2, but you're not the technoNostradamus that you think you are either. Every one of your threads is you typing out paragraphs of technobabel and making wild predictions that never come true. Anyone who tries to debate you just gets walls of text of more babel that shows a lack of truly understanding what you're talking about.
Just stop it already.
Which spun off this thread to start another: Let's discuss the future of Xbox and Windows gaming.http://www.pcworld.com/article/2872370/windows-10-powers-up-pc-gaming-with-directx-12-native-dvr-deep-xbox-integration.html said:The artificial wall between Xbox players and PC gamers is coming down with Microsoft's upcoming Windows 10, which allows streaming of Xbox One games to PCs and even lets gamers on the two disparate platforms play together.
The announcement was one of several made by Microsoft to show the company's commitment to PC gamers.
"We will treat gaming on Windows 10 with as much passion and energy as we have on the Xbox One," said Xbox One and Microsoft Studios chief Phil Spencer.
In addition to streaming games long confined to the Xbox One, Spencer showed off DirectX 12 on Windows 10 and announced a new game DVR feature that will be built into the new OS.
Yeah, I think the way developers approach PC gaming will have to be different.Sure that's true but most people try to pay as little as they can for their hardware. Just the other day I had to explain to a mother and her 12 year old daughter that her laptop wasn't powerful enough to run the new Sims game.
They just didn't understand. So I had to explain it to them, specifically why their laptop is no good. Then they had a flurry of questions as to why I couldn't "upgrade" their old ass, cheap laptop.
I don't see the end of consoles. Ever. But I do wish that all games are released on PC. That was if I want to play Uncharted 4 or Mario Kart 8 at 1080p/60fps... I can.
Pretty much.Why can't we all just get along?
Some people like consoles/some prefer PC's.
Neither are going away anytime soon.
An entirely different kettle of fish and a completely different audience. The PC is fundamental to modern human life, it isn't going anywhere and there will always be people who fancy developing a game to play on it.
Again, we come to the fundamental crux of the matter. A PC as a first choice platform is that of an enthusiast.
With the release of Windows 10 they are nearly there with the difference between a Windows 10 PC and the XB1 being mostly artificial and consisting of a simple UI on PC hardware which supports statements in this thread about marketing and simple UI.May 27, 2004: 10:58 AM EDT
By CNN/Money staff writer Chris Morris
NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Two months ago, Microsoft spoke glowingly of bridging the gap between the PC and Xbox. Now the company is considering erasing that gap completely.
While Microsoft has publicly avoided discussing its next generation machine, it has been quietly conducting studies on the consumer appeal of a hybrid device that would play both PC and Xbox games.
Amys probably forgot she posted this: Microsoft thinking about a machine that would play both console and PC games.
With the release of Windows 10 they are nearly there with the difference between a Windows 10 PC and the XB1 being mostly artificial and consisting of a simple UI on PC hardware which supports statements in this thread about marketing and simple UI.
It is inevitable. It makes zero sense for Microsoft to keep these two platforms separate.