no this year we hve had ffxiii, red dead redemption, gow3, smg2 so far all selling in multimillion
we will hve halo, gt5, cod later this year
console gaming wont decline in software. PC gaming will
Will Console and PC Gaming Decline in 2010? | |||
| Both Will Decline. | 9 | 18.75% | |
| Only PC Will Decline. | 15 | 31.25% | |
| Only Consoles Will Decline. | 13 | 27.08% | |
| Both Will Grow. | 11 | 22.92% | |
| Total: | 48 | ||
no this year we hve had ffxiii, red dead redemption, gow3, smg2 so far all selling in multimillion
we will hve halo, gt5, cod later this year
console gaming wont decline in software. PC gaming will
Killiana1a said:
Yeah, ever since Sierra and Westwood folded, the big names and anticipated games in PC gaming have gone elsewhere. I agree in comparison to 2009 where there was really no big PC release other than Dragon Age: Origins, it will only be higher this year due in large part to StarCraft 2. I have a contrarian thought, if this economic recession continues for another 2 plus years, then we may see the PC market downsize even further. Think about it. PC gaming is the most expensive platform to game. The entry point is a PC costing at least $1200 and higher if you want to play the latest, greatest FPS at maximum resolution settings. Computer technology gets better year after year along with getting more expensive, therefore how can one expect long term increases in the PC market in the midst of a global economic downturn when consumers just do not have that extra $1000 to blow in upgrading their PC or getting a new one? As for consoles, year over year fluctuates, but it is a fairly stable market because of the low entry point for the individual consumer. |
The beauty of PC gaming is that you can spend less than $500 and still play all the games and have them look at least as good as they do on a console. The $1200 is only in the cases if you wat more, far more, than a current console will ever be able to even imagine of processing.
With those $500 you also would not need to upgrade every year at all. Since it will still play those those games and it won't play the newest game on max, but let's be honest, the newest game on max wouldn't be able to even launch on the consoles before setting them on fire.
All in all, your post told me you don't know crap about PC gaming for you to be making such long posts about it.
Only console gaming will decline, have you seen the PC gaming market in China?
Well its growth is slowing down a bit, but still far from declining.
The quarter revenues of top 8 CHinese PC gaming companies in recent 2 years.

| Killiana1a said: I have a contrarian thought, if this economic recession continues for another 2 plus years, then we may see the PC market downsize even further. Think about it. PC gaming is the most expensive platform to game. The entry point is a PC costing at least $1200 and higher if you want to play the latest, greatest FPS at maximum resolution settings. Computer technology gets better year after year along with getting more expensive, therefore how can one expect long term increases in the PC market in the midst of a global economic downturn when consumers just do not have that extra $1000 to blow in upgrading their PC or getting a new one? As for consoles, year over year fluctuates, but it is a fairly stable market because of the low entry point for the individual consumer. |
http://store.steampowered.com/hwsurvey/?platform=pc
This doesn't support what you say. The average PC gamer uses what you'd consider to be a pretty average PC to game on, especially given the fact that a lot of legacy software which can run on any old PC is sold.
mirgro said:
The beauty of PC gaming is that you can spend less than $500 and still play all the games and have them look at least as good as they do on a console. The $1200 is only in the cases if you wat more, far more, than a current console will ever be able to even imagine of processing. With those $500 you also would not need to upgrade every year at all. Since it will still play those those games and it won't play the newest game on max, but let's be honest, the newest game on max wouldn't be able to even launch on the consoles before setting them on fire. All in all, your post told me you don't know crap about PC gaming for you to be making such long posts about it. |
yup, over a year ago you could build a $500 PC that would play Crysis on High Settings (much better than any console). Now it's much cheaper than that.
Sorry to bring up this old thread, but it's interesting to see how us VGCz members percieved a few months ago the growth/decline of both PC Gaming and Consoles for 2010. The final results of the poll are:
Results (33 votes)
30.3% Only PC Will Decline (10 votes)
27.3% Only Consoles Will Decline (9 votes)
24.2% Both Will Grow (8 votes)
18.2% Both Will Decline (6 votes)
Only 27% got it right. Consoles declined (which was already predictable when the thread was made), and we can safely assume that PC grew.
| ArcticGabe said: Only console gaming will decline, have you seen the PC gaming market in China? Well its growth is slowing down a bit, but still far from declining. The quarter revenues of top 8 CHinese PC gaming companies in recent 2 years.
|
PC gaming is on the rise in china only because of the free mmorpgs they release all the time nearly every month.
The cash shops/microtransaction of those free mmorpgs are piling in majority of the cash.