arlos wrote:I feel that consoles have their place, especially as mentioned earlier in the thread, multiplayer for a game where you have a bunch of friends over camped on the couch. Unfortunately, I simply cannot stand console controllers, period. For one, they universally give me hand cramps if I play for very long, especially in the left thumb as you mash the direction pad. I get WAY more precise control with an actual joystick for flying games or games like Mechwarrior, and can move around a map on the screen much easier with a mouse than with moving a cursor with the direction pad. I can't even imagine trying to play a FPS with the kind of slow and imprecise movement you get with a gamepad as compared with a mouse + keyboard combo.
Well yeah if you are pressure mashing the controller like a mongoloid of course you'll cramp up. New controllers nowadays are ergonomic and respond very sensitively so you don't have to mash hard. No Mechwarrior persay, but there is Armored Core, ZOE, and a few mech games out there. Yes, turning 180 degrees fast is harder to do on a controller, but imo that just adds to the challenge.
arlos wrote:Not to mention, trying to move your fingers and hands to mash button combinations for games that require it feels insanely awkward to me, and rapidly accelerates the hand cramping I talked about. Hell, I played the flute for 8-10 years, good enough that instructors were telling me that if I dedicated myself to it I could be first section in a major philharmonic orchestra, so it's not that I lack for manual dexterity, but those controllers just don't work for me.
Again, ease up. Most games don't have ridiculous button commands unless they're fughting games or fast paced action type games or sports. RPGs are most repetitive button pushing. Shooters generally work off of like 2 or 3 buttons. FPS uses a few, but again, accept the fact that you might suck right off the bat and learn the controls and get used to em, it'll be like second nature all over again vs. a keyboard.
arlos wrote:Also, it hasn't been until extremely recently that consoles have had the capability to actually patch games once they were released. Before, if there was a bug, no matter how crippling, you just had to put up with it. Fuck that. Now, I admit that is different, at least to some extent, if you have one of the latest consoles and have it hooked up to the internet. Even before the internet, most computer game companies at least had a BBS you could dial into and download patches from.
Name me a console game that had a glitch that made it absolutely unplayable. I really can't think of any. Aside from some clipping issue here or there and the occasional sound blip I've never run into a HUGE mistake on a console game. On PC however, Daggerfall was unbeatable until after like 10 patches. EQ, omg where do i begin. It's called, "Get it right the first time".
arlos wrote:Furthermore, having looked at games that came out on the consoles vs games that came out on the PC, the console games were almost universally "action" type games, like platform jumpers, etc. which never interested me. PC games have always had a much broader selection of types of games, and the games produced for PCs almost always have had more depth and "stuff" to them. Not to mention, most of my favorite kind of games really simply don't exist on the consoles. Where is Civilization for the consoles, for example? How about Master of Orion? How about any Mechwarrior game past Mechwarrior 2? Rome: Total War, perhaps? Hell, where's a RPG with the customization, character choices, etc. of Baldur's Gate 2 or even Neverwinter Nights 2?
Console games have a vastly broader selection of games. There are a lot of "universal action games" but there's plenty of sports, RPG's, shooters, and sims. You just have to pay attention.
arlos wrote:Lastly, PCs will always be ahead of consoles when it comes to graphics, if you're willing to keep your PC updated to at least near the cutting edge. Yes, that costs, but how much does it cost to upgrade a video card compared to getting a HD TV that will give you resolutions even remotely comparible to what you can get on a PC monitor? It costs you either way.
HDTV can be used for other things aside from games. HD monitors are pretty much only for gaming and graphic design. Sure you can watch a DVD on a computer but personally I'd much rather do that from my couch with the experience of my home theater surrounding that experience. Also, HD TV's can be as low as 600 bucks, same price as a video card for your comp or a motherboard processor combo, etc etc etc.
arlos wrote:Anyway, I'm quite happy with sticking to PCs for the most part for games, if for no other reason than my hands don't hurt like hell after playing for an hour. Sure, consoles have their place, but that place will always be 2nd place to a PC.
Numbers don't lie. Console numbers far surpass that of PC games. If you're talking about 2nd place it definately isn't referring to popularity or sales.