The Console Wars Are Over: XBox and Sony Both Lost
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I built a complete mid range gaming PC in 2014 for about $1500 (I had to scrounge for deals to get the price that low). Since then I've replaced the videocard twice (once for performance, once because it died) for $600 each ($1200) both SSD and HDD ($300) the RAM ($100) couple of fans ($50) and two gaming mice ($100). So that's $3200 in ten years for a machine that does play everything but is now low tier. My friends spend easily double that and I think they're nuts, and as you say if I was strictly a console gamer I would only be out $1600 or so. So my quoted statement stands, it costs twice as much to be a PC gamer.
I've tried to keep a modular build where I can swap out parts and honestly this is the closes I've come. They always end up changing the port types, HDD interfaces, and so on every 5 years (Remember an AGP port?). So usually its a whole new build each time. Kinda amazed this one has lasted this long.
Also the idea that anyone can take their random internet box and make it a gaming machine is pretty unrealistic, since most people aren't buying full size cases w/ space for the needed components, performance cooling, etc. Try taking a micro PC and adding even a bottom tier GPU or replacing the gimped i3 and see how easy it is. Or more likely, people will have some cheapo laptop they bought from Costco w/ 4gb of RAM soldered to the board.
Mate, all I'm getting from this is that you suck at budgeting and keeping your electronics from breaking.
I've had two computers since 2014 that were upper middle range on completion, both for a little over 1000$ each time, with a very minor and separate cost for peripheral pieces breaking at a separate rate. The only part that's broken in that time is a single HDD, which was only a minor loss as it was small and incredibly old.
I only even bought the new one because I hated the case I had and found a better deal building from scratch rather than swapping out a bunch of aging parts.
Yes that's why the point was "spend 500$ on a shitbox with minimal use or capability or 1200$ on a decent gaming one" Which means the final total is 700$, not 1200. Or only about 100-200$ above a console with far more versatility. Its the wet boot theory in a perfect example.
Its as simple as smartly investing and using your money with forward planning instead of constantly needing to buy and upgrade random parts that you've destroyed or find is "outdated" over and over. Spend the money once and then you can not spend a dime for a long while, which gives you the necessary savings to spend on the next one instead of constantly being nickle and dimed yearly.
If your friends are spending double that, then they aren't nuts. They are retarded and probably buying things like Alienware which are well known to buy massively overpriced in exchange for "brand and aesthetics" instead of any quality. Or paying to be the top 1% of hardware, which will always be a fool's investment.
Again, this isn't an industry wide problem. I think you guys are just bad with money and don't understand your experience isn't universal.