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@Obsolesce said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
What PC and specs do you use for gaming?
I've got a Dell gaming machine that's about two years old. Ryzen 7 third gen and Radeon GPU. Had to get something better than our six year old gaming laptop as the kids wanted VR.
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@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@Obsolesce said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
What PC and specs do you use for gaming?
I've got a Dell gaming machine that's about two years old. Ryzen 7 third gen and Radeon GPU. Had to get something better than our six year old gaming laptop as the kids wanted VR.
What GPU?
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@Obsolesce said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@Obsolesce said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
What PC and specs do you use for gaming?
I've got a Dell gaming machine that's about two years old. Ryzen 7 third gen and Radeon GPU. Had to get something better than our six year old gaming laptop as the kids wanted VR.
What GPU?
I'm guessing an RX580 based on the previous post he had about the system.
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@Obsolesce said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@Obsolesce said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
What PC and specs do you use for gaming?
I've got a Dell gaming machine that's about two years old. Ryzen 7 third gen and Radeon GPU. Had to get something better than our six year old gaming laptop as the kids wanted VR.
What GPU?
RX580 4GB
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@stacksofplates said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@Obsolesce said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@Obsolesce said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
What PC and specs do you use for gaming?
I've got a Dell gaming machine that's about two years old. Ryzen 7 third gen and Radeon GPU. Had to get something better than our six year old gaming laptop as the kids wanted VR.
What GPU?
I'm guessing an RX580 based on the previous post he had about the system.
I had to go look it up, you had it before I did.
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Bought the machine over a year ago, 16GB RAM, Ryzen 7 Third Gen eight core, RX580 4GB for ~$620
I've since added an 8TB Helium drive to it as we store so many games.
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@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
Bought the machine over a year ago, 16GB RAM, Ryzen 7 Third Gen eight core, RX580 4GB for ~$620
I've since added an 8TB Helium drive to it as we store so many games.
We got an Oculus Rift 2 hooked to it, too. Runs just about anything we throw at it, no problem. Really extremely high end games still have to be turned down, obviously, but most of our TVs are 1080p and I've yet to have it not totally rock whatever it's doing.
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@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
Bought the machine over a year ago, 16GB RAM, Ryzen 7 Third Gen eight core, RX580 4GB for ~$620
I've since added an 8TB Helium drive to it as we store so many games.
That video card alone is still listed on New Egg at $350+
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@Dashrender said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
Bought the machine over a year ago, 16GB RAM, Ryzen 7 Third Gen eight core, RX580 4GB for ~$620
I've since added an 8TB Helium drive to it as we store so many games.
That video card alone is still listed on New Egg at $350+
Yeah, I know! It's not bad at all. That's why deals on full systems tend to be so good. You can often get CPU/GPU combos inside a full working system for about the same as those components alone. That is not a cheap CPU, either. And I bought it ~14 months ago! And it comes with Windows 10, a case, PSU, 16GB of adequate RAM, warranty, etc.
Too good of a deal to pass up.
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@scottalanmiller said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
Bought the machine over a year ago, 16GB RAM, Ryzen 7 Third Gen eight core, RX580 4GB for ~$620
I've since added an 8TB Helium drive to it as we store so many games.
So you paid $620 for a gaming device in 2019 (excluding accessories like games, monitor, controller, keyboard/mouse, etc), that isn't any better than much lower priced consoles released in 2016/2017?
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@Obsolesce said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
So you paid $620 for a gaming device in 2019 (excluding accessories like games, monitor, controller, keyboard/mouse, etc), that isn't any better than much lower priced consoles released in 2016/2017?
LOL. Well if you look at it that myopically, still no. Don't think of it like a consumer, think of it like a business. If this were an IT buying decision, you'd never state it like this. There's a couple points to make..
The PS4 Pro XBox One uses a Jaguar processor, replaced in 2014. So that's some ancient low end tech that you were paying for in 2017. Not only is it old and slow, it's only four cores in those devices. This is double the cores, each vastly higher performance.
Then there is the GPU. While the PS4 Pro has a decent GPU, it's still 20% less than this one. There's a reason that this GPU alone costs so much today - it's still above all those consoles in power.
Then there is RAM, 16GB + 4GB instead of 8GB total. Pretty big gap there.
So the first point.... no console on the market even in 2018 could hold a candle to this rig, not even close.
Then the price. This came with keyboard / mouse, just like a console comes with a controller or two. But a BIG piece of the PC gaming ecosystem is the ability to keep using good gear. So the same controllers we've had for half a decade are all pristine and all work with this. So unlike on a console where I'd need new ones, the investment that I already have keeps working.
But ALL of that is background noise. The real factor is the games. I have an existing library, that is constantly growing, of over 2,000 games. I get at least a game a week (if not a game a day) from Epic. I constantly buy from Steam & GOG. My library is massive. And it all just keeps working. Ones I bought years ago, ones I just bought. And they keep getting better as I can crank up the specs more and more. And those games, I'm getting them for an itty bitty fraction of the cost of the console games while having a vastly larger selection to choose from. Most games I want to play aren't available on consoles, so paying anything, let alone a lot, for a console with very few games to play on it would be crazy.
So let's look at TCO. I spend something like $1200 over the course of 2-3 years to have what I have. Had I gone with a console I'd have spent what, maybe $3,000 - $4,000 to get the same general amount of games, but a way lower end device?
So yeah... I think saving a few grand to get a much better experience is the smart money. The math says this is the only way to go if you like to game. Now, if you are buying a Nintendo Switch for Animal Crossings and never want to play another game and it's available nowhere else.... well then that's what you need to do. But if you are a gamer and plan to play any number of games, the gap between PC and consoles gets pretty large - especially if you start getting into that "exclusives" game where you need several consoles because each one has something unique. Nintendo especially has that issue, but they all do (so does the PC.) But the PC game selection is so much bigger than all the consoles combined... it really gives you an opportunity to just save your money and get "unlimited" games on a single platform.
Add to that that if I buy games on a console, I have to play them on that console and tie it up. But if I buy games on PC I can use them on any of several computers that I have otherwise (not all are gaming rigs) so that I have loads of flexibility with them on hardware I already own. So the utility of any individual game is magnified significantly. Case in point... my wife played loads of games on her laptop over the holiday, no need to bring our gaming machine with us to use all the games. I have some games on my laptop for when I'm traveling and need something to play. My kids have an older gaming rig in their bedroom and the big gaming rig in the living room. We get so much more out of it (before we even consider streaming elements) than you can with a console (without buying lots of consoles.)
So when you look at it from an IT / business perspective, it all makes sense.
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@Obsolesce said in Random Thread - Anything Goes:
So simple answer.... oh hell yeah my PC is SO much better than a console, lol.
Considering every year my in laws offer to buy us a console (because they like buying consoles) and every year we tell them not to because we don't want games on consoles because they are way, way too costly and we don't want the lower quality... I'm paying for the PC when the consoles would be free. And the difference in the cost of games is so large that it still makes it worlds cheaper to get the better experience!
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And that's just the tip of the iceberg... any old console I own just turns into worthless crap that you put in a box or throw away. What the heck do you do with last gen consoles?
But gaming PCs can be moved into "secondary gaming rigs for less demanding games" that handle new games for many years after you want to replace them as your main rig. And even after that, because of how much power they tend to have, they can always be redeployed for work or other tasks because they are PCs!
And all of that is in addition to them being useful as desktops whenever you need them to be as well.
I could spend all day looking at how spending SO much less on my PC gaming ecosystem and getting SO much more out of it is better. But the basics are.... pay way less, get way more. What else is there?