@MalakTawus: I think what he is referring to is crossbuy and crossplay scenarios. Like Microsoft has done with Xbox and PC. My PC might not be able to play Xbox games, but if I buy Arc or Minecraft digitally, I can play the game on my PC, Xbox, or Mobile.
So the idea is your purchases and save games ally across consoles. It's not something that sounds farfetched to me.
The only problem I anticipate is that a company, Sony for instance, won't want to miss out on their cut of a game sale, so they won't want to let you play a game you bought on PC because they want you to buy it again on PlayStation so that they can get a cut.
@Thanatos2k: PC has always been king, even when it wasn't popular. PC gamers were playing Elder Scrolls and Fallout whole console players were playing Super Mario.
@gamingdevil800: Even the Super Nintendo's online game play had a subscription charge. Most PC games had monthly subscription charges just to play them.
I personally like how it is now, where individual games don't have subscription fees, PC is free and consoles have a low cost subscription charge but make up for it with free games.
@mooglestar: I personally think it has a really good line up. Right now I have Smash Bros, Mario Odyssey, Zelda Breath of the Wild, and Kirby. They're all really fun.
I mostly play on PC, but I do play my switch more than any console I own.
@Atzenkiller: it was intended to prevent things like console mods that allowed you to play burned games or hacks that unlock DLCs without you paying for then.
The law has kind of gone too far in my opinion, but it's original intention makes sense.
@locke90: I'm down for a Diablo mobile game as long as you can buy it and it's not a microtransaction driven game. It's be cool to be able to play Diablo on my phone while I'm at work.
@sakaixx: lol, if your gaming consists of Angry Birds, rims, Maple Story, and other free games. You mite as well just use your phone as your main gaming console.
@LordCrisp: I don't disagree that if you're super casual and only play games a few hours a week, console is probably the way to go.
If you're really in to gaming, PC is the way to go 100% though. My PC is hooked in to its own monitor and to out TV, so it can be played either way. You can also use Xbox controllers wirelessly on PC too. So aside from the better graphics and frame rate, it's the same experience as playing on a console connected to the TV. Games are also way cheaper on PC than on console and the ability to MOD most games is great too. Halo SPV3 is the best Halo campaign since Halo 3, and you'd never get to play it if you didn't have a PC.
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