Bofferbrauer2 said:
Just to expand on the bolded part: Unlike previous generations where consoles and hardware got cheaper over time, now the consoles get more expensive and hardware just barely cheaper over time. At the same time PC hardware had some hefty price hikes in the 2017-2023 timeframe, which raised the prices for a PC equivalent to a console much more expensive. However, while in 2021-2023 it was pretty expensive to build a PC that was equivalent to a PS5, now with new, cheaper hardware and the price hikes for the PS5, buying a new PC with similar capabilities as a PS5 isn't much more expensive than the console now. I just made the test, and even added a Playstation controller additional to the mouse/keyboard for good measure (though I left out Windows for Linux). The price tag: 882€ (1031€ with assembly and testing): Keep in mind even the weakest Zen 4 CPU and RDNA4 GPU eviscerate what's in a PS5, with a bit more RAM (35GB kit for 105€ bringing the price of the system to 925€) it could easily compete with a PS5 Pro. Please note that I could have gotten about 50€ cheaper if I always took the cheapest option (and entry-level components like an A620 board or old PCIe 2 SSD). Also, with the RAM upgrade this system should easily be playable for the coming years. The PS5 is 540€ on the same site, so not a huge gap, especially if one factors paid online or the higher game prices on consoles. |
Yeah a PC that holds its own decently well against the PS5 Pro really isn't much more expensive so it's no wonder it's been selling way worse than the PS4 Pro. The average person who is cool spending that much on something to play video games on may as well just spend some extra and get a good PC and enjoy all the benefits that brings.







