binary solo said:
I hate the "enthusiast" tag. I'm an enthusiast but I don't spend insane amounts of money on hardware. What Occulus is aimed at is the obessesive gamer. Got a high spec rig and $600 to blow on a peripheral that will only be particularly useful for a tiny minority of games. That's a pretty small segment of the gamer market. Possibly viable enough for Occulus to sell and make a profit for a little while, but possibly never a big enough segment for purpose built games to be profitable. So as a gaming device, unless it rapidly drops down to $350 or less it is destined to have a short life as a consumer device. But it might find a home at a commercial level in gaming arenas, like an evolution on laser tag. The advantage with Sony's VR is that you only need to buy a PS4. If you were looking at getting a lower level PC for gaming because you don't need or wan |
Whether you like the term or not isn't really relevant, it's the commonly used term for individuals who maintain high end PC's. Most people recognize the term, and immediately understand the small segment of the populace that it describes.
That was merely a summary of what TB said, btw, I don't really care because I don't have the req'd 970+ at present.







