Hello, as the title suggests I would like to share my thoughts on PC gaming as a whole from the perspective of a console gamer of more than a decade who has made the switch to PC a little over 3 months ago.
Firstly, I guess I should talk about how I got my PC in the first place. I decided that to build rather than buy, as I had a rudimentary understanding of how PCs work, so I researched, and watched video, after video prepping myself for the build, while I saved up for it. I spent about 1500 US $s on a full setup, which included PC parts, monitor, KB&M, OS etc.
The building of the PC itself was rather easy, the front panel connectors were a pain due to my limited eyesight, and the motherboard, CPU cooler, and case I chose paired with my big hands made plugging in the CPU power connector a major annoyance. I would really plug that connector in before mounting the motherboard if I were to rebuild with these parts. But those are me problem so to speak. A real stress causer was the system's refusal to post. This being my first build, I immediately went into full blown 'I must have fucked something up' mode. I tried a lot of things, form reseating the RAM, to checking my CPU pins. I eventually called my cousin who turned me onto PC gaming in the first place, and he told me to reset my C-MOS battery which fixed it. It's a problem to me because all the videos I watched never mentioned the C-MOS battery, which was evident by the fact that I had no Idea what the **** he was talking about, when he said "Reset the C-MOS battery".
The community, well I can't really say much, as I haven't made any friends on PC , not that I'm saying that PC gamers are antisocial, I've just been too caught up with games to really socialize (Boy that sounds a lot worse when it's put into written word). I mean I played Dirty Bomb for about 100 hours when I first got on PC, then a bunch sales happen, and it all got kind of fuzzy which leads me into my next subject.
Price of games. So I have bought twelve games on PC so far, eleven on Steam, and one on Uplay.
Arma 2 complete operations - 6$
Prototype - 10$
Skyrim the special edition - 22$
Fallout 4 GOTY - 27$
Assassin's creed rouge - 8$
Tropico 4 - 4$
Civilization 5 - 11$
Tom Clancy's Into the wildlands - 30$
Dark Souls 3 - 15$
Fallout 3 GOTY - 3$
Fallout new vegas ultimate edition - 6$
Oblivion GOTY deluxe edition - 20$ (This was VERY hard to find any where but steam)
That's around 162$ for twelve games, you just can't do that on console, so it's safe to say I'm VERY happy with the sales
, and in general low prices of the PC gaming market.
The only thing I could think of as a con for me is that I REALLY miss sports games, not FIFA, or Madden, but the UFC, and boxing games (Fight night champion, since it's like the only quality boxing game out there) which don't exists on PC, but that's again a pet peeve of mine, not a slight against PC gaming.
The higher FPS, and graphical fidelity is awesome, but what I really love about this in PC gaming is the freedom to prioritize performance over eye candy, or vice versa. Not much to say not this regard PC is just better, no room for subjective thinking.
So in conclusion, I have had a FAR better gaming experience within my 3 months as a PC gamer than my 15 years as a console gamer. I don't see a reason to ever go back to be honest.
My Rig
-Asus Strix Z270F ATX motherboard
-i5 7600k Quad Core CPU at 3.8GHz
-Asus Strix 1060 6GB OC Edition Overclocked to 01878MHz Boost Clock, and 08808MHz Memory Clock
-Curcial Ballistix Elite 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR4-3000 RAM
-NZXT S340 Elite Mid Tower Case
-Cooler Master Geminll M4 CPU Cooler
-Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB 7200RPM
-EVGA 700W 80+ Bronze Certified ATX Non-Modular PSU
-Windows 10 Home OME 64-bit
Thanks for reading.
iLLusionary
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