asfish wrote:
I think it’s far too early to write these consoles off. It’s true that the launch titles (for the Xbox One) are disappointing, but I think given time there will be some good titles, they will be able to squeeze at lot out of the consoles as its standard hardware once they get going.
Also with the Xbox One they is lots more than gaming, it was worth it for Skype and the Blu Ray for me. My brother has a smart 3D Samsung TV with a Skype app, it costs £200 for specia TV Skype camera alone.
One thing I have been surprised by is how much I like Netflix, I took a month’s trial out, but will be keeping it. It’s not as up to date as NG downloading, but my wife loves it as there are loads of chick flicks for her and foreign films for her mum.
The problem with that train of thought is that the consoles are already playing catch-up, BF4 is probably the clearest example of that, with both console versions giving up resolution, detail settings, framerates and loading times to the PC version - and they cost more too! (And we're not talking about a ninja PC either. My PC's CPU, motherboard and RAM are
five years old, my graphics card is 18 months old and cost under £300 at the time, an equivalent card can now be bought for under £200 - and this PC kicks out BF4 at settings massively out of reach of both the 'next-gen' consoles.)
In the case of the XBone you're looking at a GPU that's already a sub-£100 part at retail, and around £150 for the PS4's GPU. Both consoles use low-power AMD CPUs, a sub-£100 part. My concern here is that there's going to be a finite limit as to what can be squeezed out of this hardware, however clever the developers get with it - there's just going to be a brick wall where the things simply can't chuck any more pixels around.
OK, maybe 12 months down the line things will have been improved, but of course that's another 12 months down the line in PC development, so whilst the consoles might hit parity with a mid-range PC
of today in 12-18 months, the mid-range PC of 12-18 months time will have moved on too - it's not a static target, and the new consoles are expected to have a lifespan of six or seven years, or longer!
This is what I keep coming back to, when it was released and for a while afterwards,
the 360 did stuff that a PC of the time couldn't do, and I don't just mean the games.
You bought your 360, you plugged it in, you put a disc in the drive and you played a game. All the friends and achievements stuff was built in, it had a lovely clean interface, it had XBLA, it was a games machine through and through, and it all just worked.
PCs of the time were still a bit clunky, drivers were a problem, Steam was nowhere as good as it is today, games needed to be installed, there were patches and updates and all that shit, there was no unified friends or chat functionality, and so on. PC gaming was a bit of a hassle, console gaming wasn't. (Even things as simple as controllers used to be a pain in the arse on PC, especially fucking analogue ones, having to calibrate the fuckers and all that shit, now you just plug a 360 pad in, job done.)
On top of that the 360 delivered games like Ridge Racer 6, 720p@60FPS, played straight from the disc, there was nothing like it on PC. When I bought my 360 it gave me a games experience that I simply couldn't get on my PC, and that's not the case now, the new consoles have got the same games as the PC, but they're demonstrably worse than the PC equivalents.
Look at where we are with the new consoles, they need patching and updating, the games need patching and updating and they need big, long, mandatory installs. (Launch titles with 6-10GB 'updates' AFTER you've installed the game and BEFORE you can fucking play it!). They've morphed into 'entertainment centres' over which we have no control, if MS or Sony decide they want to fuck with your interface or take something away, they can just do it (look at what happened to the 360's dashboard over time, and no one can do a damn thing about it).
(I honestly think Windows 7 and Steam/Origin/GOG is less hassle than a console, I was fucking appalled that it was
35 minutes before I could play GTAV on my 360, once it'd finished updating the console, updating the game, installing the game, asking for the second disc, and so on.)
You say you like the XBone as an entertainment centre/media player and that's fine, but I already have a small, capable, media centre PC that can play any form of media from anywhere (mostly from my NAS), but I can stream from anywhere too, be it the iplayer or Netflix or Lovefilm or Megashare or discs or USB sticks, and I have total control over what I run on it and how I run it, when I update it, and so on.
I can only speak for myself and my mates, but none of us are seeing anything that makes the new consoles worthwhile purchases, and
ALL OF US had a 360 and/or a PS3 last generation.
One of our number in particular is arguably more a console gamer than he is a PC gamer (he loves his COD, screaming American teenagers and all), and even he's taken a look at the XBone and PS4, looked at the cost of entry and what he'd get for his money, and come to the conclusion he'd rather spend £500 upgrading his PC. (£500 will get a new CPU, motherboard, RAM and graphics card far in advance of what's in either next-gen console, with enough left over for an SSD, which cuts loading times to a fraction of what they are with a hard drive.)
Ultimately time will tell I suppose, but I'm calling it now, and I'm saying that the consoles are going to be playing increasingly second fiddle to the PC as this generation continues, they're clearly second best already, and that's only going to get worse IMO.