Hopwin wrote:
Well let's go with that. Average lifespan (as in able to play the most current PC games) for a $600 gaming PC is 2-3 years +100-200 for a video card update during that span +$50 for RAM upgrades during that span. Then you need to replace the PC and start the cycle over either due to a new OS or just system rot. Total investment for 6 years = on par with $1500.
No, that's not true. You're getting hung up on unnecessary upgrades. A 4 year old video card (Radeon 4870 or nVidia GTX260) from 2008 is still completely viable for current games, at high graphics settings, with that original 4 GB of RAM still working fine. (Hell, Skyrim doesn't use more than 2GB without player mods.)
In 17 years of PC gaming, i have only twice bothered to upgrade a PC between new computers, and both times it was to extend the useful life of the PC
beyond 3 years, not to keep it viable during those 3 years.
As I said, my 2 year old laptop still plays video games at
maximum graphics settings. That's with a MOBILE Radeon 5870 video chip. The desktop equivalent would be a Radeon 5770 (which was slower than the Radeon 4870 mentioned above.)
You could build a $600-700 gaming PC that likely remains capable of playing new games at near maximum settings for the next 3 years. However, it still plays new games past that. 4 years down the road it might be at medium settings, and 5-6 years at low settings, but it still works -- WITHOUT upgrades. Add in a few small upgrades, and you are doing even better. The thing is, medium settings of current games still look better than the high settings of games three years ago, and low settings in current games look better than the high settings of 5 years ago. And in all cases, they look better than the console game equivalents ever did.
Is PC gaming more expensive than consoles? It most certainly can be, and significantly so, if you're obsessed with maintaining bleeding edge. But it's not significantly so in the midrange, (especially when you factor games themselves cost 30% more on consoles) and the gaming experience is still better on PC.
As for pricing, those consoles stil retail for $300 today, and started off at $400 or $500 at release.