Nem said:
Adinnieken said:
Nem said:
You really are unpleasent to talk to. For the intelligence you claim to have you seem unable to make a post without some sort of insult in it.
Its not my fault that you want to somehow have a partial view of the situation so your points seem valid. I explained everything clearly on my post. I'm not gonna bother when you're going in circles.
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I'm not talking in circles.
From your perspective, any added feature that's beyond gaming is of no value.
The Xbox One isn't like buying a TV and a Refrigerator. It is more akin to purchasing a TV with a built in DVD player. Is it going to have value to everyone? No. Does it have the potential to have value, to people it doesn't currently offer value to, in the future? Yes. There are several features of the Xbox 360 and the original Xbox that falls into that.
The Xbox 360 included integration with Windows Media Center. Not many people took advantage of that feature, but for those that did, it was an great feature. Yay to them! I didn't particularly like it and found it slow as molasses, but that doesn't take away from the benefit other people found in the feature nor does it take away from the feature itself, nor did that harm the value and ability for the device to play games.
I'm not willing to accept the premise that every feature must be valued by every person who could potentially purchase the console. There are features and capabilities that are important to one person that aren't important to another person, but they may still buy the same product to file their need and the things they didn't think were important they may find are important to them later.
A family member bought a new car this summer, it had AWD, which she didn't really think would be useful to her. That is until this past winter when she suddenly realized, on the way to work, that she was driving through conditions that her previous car would have struggled with and which her husband in his car had gotten stuck. Something that wasn't of importance to her, something which she wouldn't have outright purchased the car for, ended up being and important feature to her.
I don't honestly understand how a feature cannot be a added value, if it's something over and above what is required. I can understand that something may not be of particular value to you, but the question wasn't do you value it. The question I asked was whether or not something was an added value.
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I didnt say it wasnt nice to have extra features. What i said is that the decision making process is more complex than that and the core concoles features take precedance and definitly arent the same for both systems.
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The xbox one and the ps4 will be sharing multiplat games, and each will have their own line up of exclusive games. What is different about the 2 regarding games? Both have sharing optons for captured gameplay video, both have cloud saving features, both have online multiplayer. What does the xbox one lack for games that the PS4 has? The xbox one has the added feature of cloud computing that can be used for games (who know how well it will work) but it seems to me as both are great gaming systems.