Yeah, makes sense, if there are a few games in higher tier that you want, then upgrading makes sense.
I grew up playing on a weak PC, so had half of the games won’t even run on it, and this apparently left some psychological scars 😀 . I like consoles, cause you buy one box, and for next 7 or so years, you can play everything that gets released (on the platform). No worrying if your system can run it or not, not feeling left out cause you can only run it on Medium with shadows at low, no fiddling with drivers and so on.
So, I’ll probably stick with consoles, unless Steam releases a nice Steam box, which works like console (like Steam Deck, but home-console type). Not sure if that will make me switch too, but that is when I would really have to think what I should do.
Yeah, makes sense, if there are a few games in higher tier that you want, then upgrading makes sense.
I grew up playing on a weak PC, so had half of the games won’t even run on it, and this apparently left some psychological scars 😀 . I like consoles, cause you buy one box, and for next 7 or so years, you can play everything that gets released (on the platform). No worrying if your system can run it or not, not feeling left out cause you can only run it on Medium with shadows at low, no fiddling with drivers and so on.
So, I’ll probably stick with consoles, unless Steam releases a nice Steam box, which works like console (like Steam Deck, but home-console type). Not sure if that will make me switch too, but that is when I would really have to think what I should do.
Yes, me too. However, I think those days are gone. And the subscription fatigue is real.