Amanar wrote:
You don't need to upgrade your gaming PC every year, that's ridiculous. Processing power has increased so much that you should be able to get by 5+ years on the same PC if you really want, just like a console. Sure towards the end you'll be running games on medium graphics and maybe 720p, and maybe you'll struggle with the latest blockbuster with the fanciest graphics. But how is that any different than the xbox360 and PS3 today? At least with the Steambox you have the option to upgrade if you want.
If people had the option to drop $100 on a GPU upgrade for their Xbox360 or PS3 today, and then suddenly it would run every game flawlessly at 1080p with better AA and AF, don't you think there would be a market for that?
Honestly, what you've stated sounds like an argument coming from experiences 10+ years ago. Today, hardware is so powerful that it'll be a long time before your system is so outdated you'll have to upgrade to play modern games. The people dropping hundreds on new graphics cards every year or two are enthusiasts trying to game on multiple monitors at 2560x1440 resolutions and the like.
I dropped out of the PC upgrade cycle 5 years ago. At the time every Christmas a game came out that you couldn't play because of some combination of these factors:
1) your processor wasn't powerful enough
2) you didn't have enough RAM (or the WRONG kind of RAM)
3) your graphics card was too old
If you are telling me that is no longer true or that "only" hard core gamers upgrade their systems then I'd have to ask why Intel and NVidia's market caps and profits are higher today than when I left the market?
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I feel like you are being intentionally dense. I'm not saying you will never have to upgrade your hardware. I'm saying that UNLIKE CURRENT CONSOLES, upgrading your hardware will not mean locking you out of your previous game purchases.
And this is different than a PC how?
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