Feeling pretty strong buyer's remorse at this point, especially with the announcement that FH5 will be available on last-gen through cloud services.
This whole gamescom show has been a waste of time so far.
Feeling pretty strong buyer's remorse at this point, especially with the announcement that FH5 will be available on last-gen through cloud services.
This whole gamescom show has been a waste of time so far.
I don't think you will necessarily lose out either way. I was going to buy a Series X, but at the time $500 plus having to find one I just decided to go the cheap route. I just haven't been a PC guy since the early 2000s, the console experience is much more for me.
It's way better than the way Soyny has turned. It wasn't but a few years ago I was going to get a PS5 at some point. It's a good thing they went woke, because they've gone super scummy anti-consumer on top of it. The most recent I noticed was they delist Ghost of Tsushima, so they can jack the price back up to $60 for a "director's cut". I'm thrilled to not be getting sucked into their PS5 game. I still play my PS4 because it's not like I'm paying to use it. I already bought almost everything I want on it, that GoT game being one of the ones I was going to wait to give them $10 for.
LOL if you have a PS4 then you'll definitely be a PC guy today, since you have faster loading times on PC, better controller versatility, and better graphics.
PC gaming today is nothing like it was back in the 80s, 90s, or even the mid-aughts.
Everything is streamlined now and is more console-like than consoles. I usually don't even turn on my PS4 because it has so many forced updates where the features become unusable unless you update. On PC you can turn off the updates, boot up Steam, and play whatever you want. You can even delay updates for games in case you would rather play than wait for the updates to download.
I got a gaming rig back in 2016/2017 (can't remember which year) and it gets to desktop from a cold boot in 17 seconds. I can get into a game faster than the PS4 can load up an app from a warm boot.
Also, being able to have Steam allow you to assign desktop navigation with a controller makes it even easier yet. I have a Switch Pro controller that I absolutely adore, so I use it for a bunch of games on PC.
I know a lot of people are adverse to gaming on PC because it's "cumbersome" and they have "upgrade" every few years, but my gaming rig gets a heck of a lot more mileage out of than the consoles these days (with the exception of the Switch, which actually functions like a classic console instead of a low-end PC).
With the XB1 and PS4 constantly having to update, and the fact that I have to install disc games before playing them (which resulted in me having to play games on my PC while waiting for games to install on my PS4), I just decided to focus more on my PC catalog than the console catalog. There was nothing consoles did better, plus you have to pay to play online with consoles, whereas online multiplayer on PC is free.
It very well could become my next thing to go back to PC, we will have to see where things go with what games come out and such. As I mentioned I am still on the old stuff with no plans to move forward.
Biggest issues for me is I'm 100% a couch/TV player. I sit at my desk for work all day. Sitting at a desk for gaming is a total no-go. I don't care how many hardcore gamers do it and how serious business it is to use the mouse and keyboard for leet skillz. Every day I get closer to old codger and farther from teenager and that stuff holds absolutely zero importance to me.
The last time I looked at going back to PC I was going to build something into an HTPC case and put on my TV. Why I didn't then is because I do tend to play a lot of older games, and up until just a few years ago controller support on PC was just plain atrocious. Sure, I can piddle with those things like xpadder or whatever it's called now forever and still be unhappy with them. At the time, MS was pushing out a lot of the backwards compatible stuff so my Xbox covered way more of what I wanted to play. Next time around, I'll look at the same thought process again and see how the PC lays out. That will probably be a few years whenever I get tired of what I have. I wouldn't be shocked if I just go to whatever the Switch's successor is and go back and catch up on whatever comes from that library instead.
I actually don't like my PS4. If I could go back to 2017 with what I know now I'd probably never have bought it. Since I have it I do play it occasionally, but it's mostly for Japanese stuff that I can't play on Xbox. A lot of those games (e.g. Yakuza series) are all going multi-platform now anyway. Sony's games lost my interest from boredom about a year before I really started to notice their wokedom.
Ha, yes! That was one of my biggest peeves with PC gaming as well. But I have a separate, dedicated gaming rig literally hooked up to a 40-inch, sitting on the entertainment system on the shelf beneath the PS4.
It's in a Syber case (horrible for heat, I know), so I had to remove the bottom plates and grille, so the GPU could vent the heat, and propped it up on some little furniture stands. So the heating issue is dealt with. Not sure why they designed the thing that way, but it was an easy problem to fix. Now it just looks like a really large Xbox-like console on the shelf.
Oh boy do I remember those days, when the Gravis Game Pad was all the rage, but support for it was about as shoddy as a wooden shed in a thunderstorm.
These days controller support is WAAAAAAY better, so much so you can actually use Steam to emulate keyboard/mouse functionality for controllers OUTSIDE of Steam.
So for my gaming rig it doesn't even have a mouse or keyboard plugged in. No wires or cables coming out of the front. All the major controllers are wireless. So I turn it on, turn on the Steam controller, and navigate to the tab I want to use. All the tabs on the main desktop are gaming related; emulators, Steam, nucleuscoop, the Xbox companion (to stream Xbox games on PC), etc.
I can't remember the exact year, but once Steam implemented Big Picture Mode they made controller compatible far superior to anything else on the market. No more Xpadder, no more Xbox360CE, no more DualSoft4 or whatever that DualShock emulator is called. It's all native support for every type of controller, even the 8bit retro SNES wireless controllers, which I bought for the Switch but also use on PC to play stuff like Streets of Rage Remake.
Same here. Only two major things I play now are the PC and Switch. I know my post sort of reads like a sales pitch, but really, I'm just so happy with my gaming rig and how console-like it feels. That was my biggest disappointment with the XB1 and PS4. The load times, the installation times, the constant updates. One day while I was waiting for a really large update to install on PS4, where I couldn't do anything but sit and wait, I started thinking "Why am I doing this? Why am waiting for a console to load an update when I could just use my gaming rig and multi-task?" That was the eye-opening moment for me.
The only thing I don't use very often is the VR headsets, and it's just because of how cumbersome they are. But otherwise, I've been playing through quite a few old PS3 games via emulation on PC. Just click the tab on the desktop, hook up a DualShock controller, and you're good to go. It's amazing because it's easier and better playing some PS3 games on PC (with native resolution upscaling) than it is on the PS4!
Haha, I just got rid of a Gravis Gamepad I found in a drawer a few months ago. No idea why I'd hung on to it as I haven't used it since the 90s. 15 pin game port, so I have no use for it anymore. Worked sort of ok in the old DOS platformers. I remember playing Descent with a joystick for some reason too. I guess it worked ok.
So RPCS3 works that well? I've tried Dolphin and PCSX2 and was quite impressed. I doubt my antique CPU will run PS3 but I wouldn't use it anyway. Still will note for future reference.
Right now if anyone wants to sell me anything, they have to work on some games. I can't think of a time where I've been less interested in what's coming out, so I'll just keep what I have.
Interesting. I moved away from couch/TV gaming to office/desk gaming because my office setup was so comfortable I thought it was superior. My office chair is really comfortable, and my being closer to monitors means the game takes up more of my field of view than playing in my living room on the TV. I like it so much I use the same setup for my consoles.
And I'm not getting any younger either, which is why my aging eyes like being closer to the screen instead of further away.