Console Vs PC  

352 members have voted

  1. 1. Which do you prefer?

    • Console (PS/Xbox/Gamecube etc)
      51
    • PC (Windows games/Mac/linux)
      119
    • Both
      44
  2. 2. Which controller system do you prefer

    • Keyboard and mouse (PC)
      168
    • Controller (Any controller for any platform)
      105
    • Joystick
      18
    • Paddle
      1
    • Trackball
      2
    • Arcade style Joystick (Joystick with buttons)
      9
    • Steering wheel
      19
    • Motion sensing (Wii/Move/Kinect)
      13
    • Light gun (Retro)
      2
    • Touch screen (DS/iPad/iPhone)
      10
    • 'Gameboard' (see picture in thread)
      5


Recommended Posts

Nice way to start off, I know know that I'm arguing with a 15 year-old living in Mom's basement. I voted for Consoles, not specifically the 360. I happen to own a 360 because I like the controller and a few of the games better. Unless you want to call me a console fanboy, which is as retarded as me calling you an oxygen fanboy. By the way, you can quote me line by line by just highlighting part of my post and pressing that nice shiny "Quote" button. Us grown ups actually sometimes even manually type in the [ quote][/ quote]. Not that difficult. Try it, it'll make your garbage a lot easier to read and address.

...A flash gamer? So you're comparing a $300 console that can play full blown 3D games with a $300 machine that's good for....Robot Unicorn Attack? Fantastic comparison. At any rate, For the cost of that $600 PC, I can get a 360 elite with a 23" HD monitor and a game, and still have enough left over to get a few months of Live. Very poor argument there, PCs may be better in some ways, but will never be price efficient. Let's also not forget that in the real world, adults buy Windows, not pirate it, so in $600, you haven't even factored in the price of a Windows 7 license. Unless you intend to game on Linux. Which, if you do, I have pity for you.

Completely true. Firstly, the "new" (I say "new" because they've been out for a long time now) Jasper chipsets cannot Red Ring (Or if they do it's very very rare), so the chances of complete XB failure are quite slim. And I say again, you can repair your Xbox just as easily in a third part repair shop as you can with a computer. On the topic of losing files any memory stick up to 16 GB will back up your save files on your 360 (not sure about the PS3). Some online games even store your data on their servers (COD, Rainbow 6) and any content your purchase on Live can be re-downloaded at any time on any console provided you recover your gamertag. Seriously, you're really reaching for thin air now; the point is if your PC crashes to the point where your files get ****ed, you've lost files and stability (temporarily) on a machine that you use for your real life. Us grown ups actually use our computers for big-boy things like writing up company reports and spreadsheets. So I say again, what's your point?

Consoles play their games perfectly when the dev has put in the time and effort to test, retest, and fine tune his or her code to ensure perfect operation on the Xbox. The upside to this is that he/she doesn't need to worry about multiple configurations, only the one that the 360 needs (or PS3, if the case calls for it). The PS3, compared to the 360's architecture, is vastly more complicated and new to developers, and most STILL haven't utilized all the cores of the PS3 or its full graphical potential, so I am not surprised that a PORT of a popular game plays better on a familiar console architecture. At any rate, those points still don't make much sense. I don't quite understand what you're trying to argue, I never said they'll always play the newest games properly, I simply said that hardware requirements are never an issue for the consoles. Whether or not they "stutter" has everything to do with how the game is coded and nothing to do with the hardware of the consoles.

Although I'm sure you'd love to think that, I don't think you've ever seen the difference between Gears of War 1 and 2. Or between Forza 2 and 3. And so on. I don't give a damn about dx9 or 10 or whatever irrelevant PC-exclusive technology you want to use, I'm not blind and I see a clear graphical improvement between games that first came out and games now. And like I said, you're so obssessed with dx8 this and dx9 that to the point that you really don't seem to understand not all games are equal. Games that were out for the original Xbox and moved to the 360 don't instantly look better because of the hardware. The actual graphical elements and resources used in the game need to be top notch and usually completely redone, the game engine needs to properly handle all the elements being rendered, and the physics engine (if applicable) needs to be able to cope with both. If those aren't' the case, then ANY game, console or pc, will look like crap.

...Every time you play a console game, all that goes through your mind is how they would look with DirectX? That's IT? Nothing else about the game interests you? I don't know if I should call that flatout pathetic, or just simply go with the fact you're biased to hell and back.

No, you've heard what you wanted to hear because you are a PC gamer and you probably just Googled "RROD" and assumed the number of results that came back equated the number of people. I myself have owned the same 360 since the start, and the same is the case with the 15+ people I regularly play with on Live. It's nto that difficult. I know people who have the original Non-Jasper chipsets and they're still doing fine (they keep their 360s well ventilated). At the same time, It's so damn easy for me to just shoot right back at you how many times I've read forum posts about games crashing people's computers or people having hardware failures with their PC. See how irrelevant that is?

/sigh lolz. w/e. some of us adults prefer to put our points in point form rather than bother to type out /quote etc. sorry get over it.

flash games are big right now. not my cup of tea, but really the big thing these days. just ask zynga. $60-80 games says otherwise about price efficiency. upfront a 360+23" monitor might be cheaper but buy new games regularly over the course of say a year it will easily equal out. and there are half decent PCs that cost $600 with win, besides the fact that you can easily "transfer" a win license to a new PC.

lolz at this whole paragraph. PCs have many options to easily and nearly instantly backup mission critical data. so you can redownload your games with xbl, guess what i can do that with steam. and warranties tend to be better for PC parts than they are for any console, along with the ability to trouble shoot PC problems long before RMA. as if fairly bad prebuilts were even as bad as the 360's have proven to be here.

which is why post release patches have become more and more common and necessary in the last decade for console games yes? and i think the stutter seen on certain ps 3 games and even 360 games is very indicative of both the hardware and the dev wquality expected of consoles and their games. it's true pc gamers put up with grabage at releases from their games but this has been true for 20 years. console games on the other hand used to be different. not so different nowadays.

i absolutely rofled at this paragraph. dx9 was a huge leap from dx8. overall console games look much the same form the 360/ps3 launch to now. if certain franchise looks better to you for some reason it's probably due to the art department, not actual technical graphics improvement.

/sigh lolz. w/e. some of us adults prefer to put our points in point form rather than bother to type out /quote etc. sorry get over it.

flash games are big right now. not my cup of tea, but really the big thing these days. just ask zynga. $60-80 games says otherwise about price efficiency. upfront a 360+23" monitor might be cheaper but buy new games regularly over the course of say a year it will easily equal out. and there are half decent PCs that cost $600 with win, besides the fact that you can easily "transfer" a win license to a new PC.

lolz at this whole paragraph. PCs have many options to easily and nearly instantly backup mission critical data. so you can redownload your games with xbl, guess what i can do that with steam. and warranties tend to be better for PC parts than they are for any console, along with the ability to trouble shoot PC problems long before RMA. as if fairly bad prebuilts were even as bad as the 360's have proven to be here.

which is why post release patches have become more and more common and necessary in the last decade for console games yes? and i think the stutter seen on certain ps 3 games and even 360 games is very indicative of both the hardware and the dev wquality expected of consoles and their games. it's true pc gamers put up with grabage at releases from their games but this has been true for 20 years. console games on the other hand used to be different. not so different nowadays.

i absolutely rofled at this paragraph. dx9 was a huge leap from dx8. overall console games look much the same form the 360/ps3 launch to now. if certain franchise looks better to you for some reason it's probably due to the art department, not actual technical graphics improvement.

Blah blah blah.

Translation: "I'm a whiny little child who doesn't like logic and I didn't read your big long post because it scared me so I'll just say 'lol' every other word and make it seem like you're stupid."

I think I hit the nail on the head there. Nice try, by the way. (not) PC games also cost the same range, just FYI. The thing is, I can buy used console games. Because of your DRM restrictions and copy protection and StarForge (or whatever it's called), that's not an option for you. Get over it, PC gaming is not cheap and never will be. Guess what? Like I said before, I can play Assassin's Creed 2 WITHOUT an internet connection? Like, omigosh. Is there something wrong with post-release patches? Because I don't see what's wrong with waiting an extra 10 seconds to play my game with bugs fixed.

Again, I don't give a damn about dx8 or dx9, I'm more concerned with whether or not my games play smoothly and look great. Which they do.

You keep whining about dx9, I'll keep paying far less for a more consistent and stable gaming experience that doesn't affect my work life.

It's a shame. I was searching for someone who doesn't have the attention span of a 13 year-old want to refute me? Actually, never mind. I think I'm done with this thread. Good bye.

<snipped>

Us grown ups actually use our computers for big-boy things like writing up company reports and spreadsheets. So I say again, what's your point?

<snipped>

Pardon me? I must be using my computer incorrectly then.???:blink:

I had an Xbox 360 and couldn't stand the noise it made or come to grips with using the controller. Gave it away after a week. (to a 12 year old???:shiftyninja:?)

PC for me all the way.

Pardon me? I must be using my computer incorrectly then. :blink:

I had an Xbox 360 and couldn't stand the noise it made or come to grips with using the controller. Gave it away after a week. (to a 12 year old :shiftyninja: )

PC for me all the way.

I never hear my 360.

Us grown ups actually use our computers for big-boy things like writing up company reports and spreadsheets. So I say again, what's your point?

Last time I checked grow up's produce games which result in profits. Must be only kids working at blizzard and others.

Seriously stop trolling and shu away.

Back on topic then. I'm a PC guy my self.

Blah blah blah.

Translation: "I'm a whiny little child who doesn't like logic and I didn't read your big long post because it scared me so I'll just say 'lol' every other word and make it seem like you're stupid."

I think I hit the nail on the head there. Nice try, by the way. (not) PC games also cost the same range, just FYI. The thing is, I can buy used console games. Because of your DRM restrictions and copy protection and StarForge (or whatever it's called), that's not an option for you. Get over it, PC gaming is not cheap and never will be. Guess what? Like I said before, I can play Assassin's Creed 2 WITHOUT an internet connection? Like, omigosh. Is there something wrong with post-release patches? Because I don't see what's wrong with waiting an extra 10 seconds to play my game with bugs fixed.

Again, I don't give a damn about dx8 or dx9, I'm more concerned with whether or not my games play smoothly and look great. Which they do.

You keep whining about dx9, I'll keep paying far less for a more consistent and stable gaming experience that doesn't affect my work life.

It's a shame. I was searching for someone who doesn't have the attention span of a 13 year-old want to refute me? Actually, never mind. I think I'm done with this thread. Good bye.

If you are looking for ingredients to make an epic fail post, look no further than Tree's post. My god son, you really don't believe anything you posted, do you?

/facepalm

seriously. no wonder this forum has the rep that it has.

Yeah and your cringe-worthy posts does a lot to help.

i've been actively posting a few months. despite my bad typing english i'm sure your 20k posts has more to do with it than anything i have contributed.

btw i not that it matters i post and am respected on a few decent enthusiast forums with much better prestige than this forum and have no issues. ofc we tend to get the fanboyism out of the way quickly and decent moderation to move non realted post to more suitable forum but here we are stuck with the forums we have are we not.

i've lurked for a while and i have to say despite not paying attention to who posts what, this forum has the rep it deserves. fanboyism, personal attacks and such are common here. i prefer to avoid such non sense.

i have used regularly or owned a 360 a ps3 and 2 decent PCs within the last 3 years. i keep in touch with owners of all 3 consoles and regular users of of all 4 platforms. i read the news and the rumours about each platform above and beyond what is seen at neowin. i value irl experience over FUD any day of the week.

if you or anyone else wishes to continue personal attacks against me my advice is to save it for some who gives a ****. this will make our discussions that much smoother and interesting.

i come with no FUD, a little bias, and 20 years of limited hands on experience. when i buy i look at all options regardless of my preference and spend the time to find what's best

now that that's cleared up:

i obviously prefer PCs for various reasons. and for me they are a better value. perhaps for you they are not. perhaps you prefer to spend $300 on a console to game and $300-$600 on a PC to browse.or maybe you can deal with internet browsing on a ps3. me i like to do it all from my desk, and i prefer keyboard and mouse to a clumsy controller. if you prefer the reverse than good for you. but for me and many others, PC is the better value.

Where's the Mac option? :shifty:

Jokes aside, both PC and consoles have their place, depending on the game. GTA is better suited for a console, games like the Total War series are better suited for the PC.

I'm primarily PC these days, but it depends on the genre: sports/wrestling games, I'd rather play on the console. Turn-based strategy games and RPGs/Adventure games that aren't first person, I can go either way. For everything else (shooters, First-Person RPGs, MMOs, etc.), I say PC.

But, yeah, I'm primarily a PC gamer. Haven't gotten around to grabbing a PS3 or a Wii yet, and my PS2 has been collecting dust for the past year. ^_^

Are you kidding me.... PC with a keyboard + mouse.

/thread.

This. Anything even remotely like a FPS using a gamepad is just clunky and aggravating. By the time I've managed to line up a shot with a gamepad, the bad guy has already removed my skull, tossed it over the horizon, and danced on my corpse a few times.

  • 2 weeks later...
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Microsoft released Windows 11 KB5094149 / KB5095971 / KB5094156 Setup, Recovery updates by Sayan Sen Earlier this week Microsoft released its newest Patch Tuesday updates (KB5094126 / KB5093998 on Windows 11 and KB5094127 on Windows 10). Alongside those, Microsoft also released new dynamic updates. These Dynamic Update packages are meant to be applied to existing Windows images prior to their deployment. Dynamic Updates also help preserve Language Pack (LP) and Features on Demand (FODs) content during the upgrade process. VBScript, for example, is currently an FOD on Windows 11 24H2. This time both recovery and setup updates were released for Windows 11 as well as Windows 10. The company writes: "KB5095185: Safe OS Dynamic Update for Windows 11, version 26H1: June 9, 2026 This update makes improvements to the Windows recovery environment (WinRE). After installing this update, the WinRE version installed on the device should be 10.0.28000.2269. KB5094149: Safe OS Dynamic Update for Windows 11, versions 24H2 and 25H2: June 9, 2026 This update makes improvements to the Windows recovery environment (WinRE). After installing this update, the WinRE version installed on the device should be 10.0.26100.8655 KB5095971: Setup Dynamic Update for Windows 11, version 23H2: June 9, 2026 This update makes improvements to Windows setup binaries or any files that setup uses for feature updates in Windows 11, version 23H2. KB5094156: Safe OS Dynamic Update for Windows 11, version 23H2: June 9, 2026 This update makes improvements to the Windows recovery environment (WinRE). After installing this update, the WinRE version installed on the device should be 10.0.22621.7219 KB5098815: Windows Recovery Environment update for Windows 10, version 21H2 and 22H2: June 9, 2026 This update automatically applies Safe OS Dynamic Update (KB5094154) to the Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE) on a running PC. The update installs improvements to Windows recovery features. KB5094154: Safe OS Dynamic Update for Windows 10, versions 21H2 and 22H2: June 9, 2026 This update makes improvements to the Windows recovery environment (WinRE). After installing this update, the WinRE version installed on the device should be 10.0.19041.7417. KB5094153: Safe OS Dynamic Update for Windows 10, version 1809 and Windows Server 2019: June 9, 2026 This update makes improvements to the Windows recovery environment (WinRE). After installing this update, the WinRE version installed on the device should be 10.0.17763.8880. KB5094152: Safe OS Dynamic Update for Windows 10, version 1607 and Windows Server 2016: June 9, 2026 This update makes improvements to the Windows recovery environment (WinRE). After installing this update, the WinRE version installed on the device should be 10.0.14393.9234." Microsoft notes that both the Recovery and Setup updates will be downloaded and installed automatically via the Windows Update channel.
    • Quantum Error Correction Validated in Nature: Microsoft and Quantinuum Log 800-Fold Improvement Two years after the original press-release announcement, independently peer-reviewed results published in Nature on June 10, 2026, have confirmed that Microsoft and Quantinuum achieved an 800-fold reduction in quantum error rates on real trapped-ion hardware — the largest gap between physical and logical error rates ever independently validated.    What Quantum Error Correction Actually Does — and Why Breaking Even Is Hard https://www.techtimes.com/articles/318329/20260613/quantum-error-correction-validated-nature-microsoft-quantinuum-log-800-fold-improvement.htm   Quantum Computing Wiring Bottleneck Cracked by HKU Silicon Carbide Chip at Qubit Temperature Engineers at the University of Hong Kong have built the first cryogenic control chip that operates at the same temperature as superconducting qubits — 10 millikelvin, or just one-hundredth of a degree above absolute zero — without generating the heat that has forced every competing approach to park its electronics hundreds of meters of cable away. https://www.techtimes.com/articles/318325/20260613/quantum-computing-wiring-bottleneck-cracked-hku-silicon-carbide-chip-qubit-temperature.htm  
    • RevPDF 4.5.0 by Razvan Serea RevPDF is a free, fully offline PDF editor for Windows, macOS, and Linux that lets you edit text and images directly inside PDF files — no internet connection, no account, and no cloud uploads required. Unlike bloated alternatives that demand subscriptions and constant connectivity, RevPDF fits in under 60MB on desktop while delivering a complete editing toolkit: annotate, redact, sign, compress, split, merge, convert, and reorganize pages, all processed locally on your device. Smart font matching ensures edited text blends seamlessly with the original, and multi-language support includes RTL scripts such as Arabic and Hebrew. Where most PDF editors force you to choose between features and simplicity, RevPDF manages both. You can build interactive forms from scratch with text fields, checkboxes, and dropdowns, permanently redact sensitive data before sharing, draw freehand on contracts and diagrams, and add custom watermarks — all without a single file leaving your machine. Edit Text and Images Directly Inside PDFs RevPDF supports true inline PDF editing — not just annotation layers on top of a document, but actual modification of existing text and images within the file. A smart font-matching engine identifies the font used in the original document and applies it automatically when you make edits, so changes blend naturally with the surrounding content. You can reposition elements, resize images, and update text across single pages or entire documents. RevPDF 4.5.0 release notes: This is one of the biggest updates to RevPDF yet. A lot of things people have been asking for are finally here. New Features Auto Redaction Permanently redact sensitive text and areas from your PDFs before sharing. Clean, irreversible, and fully offline. Comments, Links & Bookmarks Add comments for review, insert clickable links, and create bookmarks to jump around long documents without scrolling forever. Find & Replace Search across the whole document and replace text in one go. Long overdue. Split Pages Vertically or Horizontally Split any page down the middle, vertically or horizontally. Perfect for scanned books or double-page spreads. New Drawing Tools More tools for freehand drawing and markup, better for annotations, sketches, and detailed notes. Continuous Scrolling in Editor The editor now scrolls continuously through pages instead of jumping between them. Working through long documents is a lot smoother now. PDF Metadata Editor View and edit the metadata stored inside your PDFs, including title, author, subject, and keywords. Better Font Matching Text edits now blend in more naturally by doing a better job of matching the original font. Tabbed PDF Viewer Open multiple PDFs at once in tabs and switch between them without going back to the home screen. Add Links Insert hyperlinks anywhere in your PDF, to external URLs or to other pages within the document. Share & Print Shortcuts Share or print directly from the editing screen, home screen, and viewer. No extra steps. Minor Updates Paste images directly from clipboard into your PDF New image editing tools for more control over images inside documents Bug Fixes Fixed file saving issues on Windows and Linux Everything still works fully offline. No login, no cloud, no account. Your files stay on your device. Download: RevPDF 4.5.0 | 58.0 MB (Open Source) Links: RevPDF Home Page | Github | Screenshots 1 | 2 Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Interesting. I'm not using a VPN with my phone. I tried though my home internet (Rogers) and my cellular internet (Telus) using their respective DNS servers and both trigger the dialog above.
    • Three days after Anthropic launched Claude Fable 5 as the most capable AI model it had ever released to the public, the United States government ordered it switched off — and now the company is refunding customers who paid to use a product that vanished almost overnight https://www.techtimes.com/articles/318342/20260613/us-government-pulls-anthropics-fable-5-offline-now-come-refunds-vanished-ai.htm  
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      agatameier earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      agatameier earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      ssd21345 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Contributor
      MarkHughes4096 went up a rank
      Contributor
    • Dedicated
      jordanspringer earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      507
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      175
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      139
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      90
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      76
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!