Chazore said:
I'd be more impressed if they were starting out high end, rather than trying to save on certain parts here and there. My own rig already contains multiple SSD's, with me already looking into going for an NVME next year. I'll be impressed when a console manages to do what it says on the tin, going for 4k 60fps, while also allowing for the higher end settings spectrum. I've waited years at a time for draw distances and object detail to pick up the pace. I hope next gen manages to actually increase that by a country mile, or I'll be waiting another 10ish years. I'm also wanting to see AI greatly improved, which has nothing to do with the visual side of things, but I am hoping next gen systems manage to handle an increase in AI management, as well as supporting more than a few at a given time. The only games where we see multiple AI at a time are sim based games, ones that make use of multiple threads and cores. I'm not really going to be spending that much more for the parts I've already had my eyes on. Price has never really been a deciding factor for me, unless it's between multiple hw brands (non console). My own rig as it stands is still better than current gen, and come next gen, mine will still be sitting above the other two systems. I see where you're coming from with that last sentence, but that's not going to induce some terrible spiral in the hw market, where suddenly every part is expensive, thus making next gen look desirable with it's price point. You need to remember that we've more choices to go for in the hw market, and PC parts don't stay at the same price forever either. The only two times the hw market has suffered, is either due to production facilities taking up the parts, thus raising the price thanks to production factory demands, and the bitcoin craze, both of which have since simmered down. |
Well, we can't expect miracles from a console. After all they are build for mass market and nobody would buy a console if it was $800 or more. It does look like these consoles will launch at a bit higher price point compared to current gen (guessing $599) So that is actually pretty good and the specs are pretty impressive even compared to a modern gaming pc. Guess we have to wait and see but I'm definitely expecting bigger draw distances and more complex level design. I'm not expecting native 4k at 60fps, especially if they're using Ray Tracing as standard. But that's what pc's are for if you buy a RTX3xxx later on.