[citation][nom]10tacle[/nom]And PC gaming is for suckers. The never ending driver issues, constantly having to shell out hundreds of dollars on new video cards just so you can have a decent frame rate, dealing with Windows in general, etc...I buy the PS3 and it's done. I think a PC puts out better graphics but the cost is just not worth it. So much easier to just buy the game and know it will work on the console. Marsax, maybe one day you will be like me and be able to afford both platforms and have the brains to know how to build and upgrade a PC for cheap (it takes a some patience and a little time, both of which it sounds like you obviously don't have). The last rig I built nearly a year ago for just under a grand. The E8400 is overclocked to 4.4GHz and the GTX 275 overclocked about 15%. That rig mows through anything out there right now at 1920 x 1200 resolution, something the PS3 can still only dream about for gaming.The PS3 (mine is 3 years old with a 500GB hard drive upgrade) has served me well for a lot of things. For the most part the only gaming I do on it is racing games because that controller SUCKS for shooters (Dirt2 - which stutters - NFS Shift, and Motorstorm Pacific Rift). It is a great portable gaming system for business trips and for those inevitable trips to see family to show off pictures and home videos. It also serves as my only BD player. But that's about it. For real gaming, from FPS to driving to flight simming with FSX, I always revert back to the PC. There is no substitute for graphics and hardware game play that the PS3 can only dream about.[/citation]
I actually have built my own PC's since the 486 days. I have never owned an OEM pc in my life. I enjoy building my own PC's and I'm currently looking to building a new one with the i5. My post had to do with spending $300 for a console that will play the game you buy and it will look the same for everyone. A few years back, there was the endless debate about which game looked better on which card. Smoke and fog looked great on product A but then shadows, etc looked great on product B. So the choices weren't as easy as just slapping a $200 video card in your pc. Personally, I'd rather put a regular $70 video card in my pc and spend the extra cash on a better processor and motherboard.
As I stated in my comments, I think a properly setup PC will put out better graphics but then a proper gaming pc will at least run you $800-1000. Now there are games that require more horsepower to run and a $1000 rig is not going to cut it. And let's not forget about every year, AMD or nVidia comes out with a better card than before.(ie. more money out of your pocket)
You guys keep pumping dollars into your rigs and I'll be happy with simply putting the games in my PS3 (for the next 5 years) and not having to spend an extra dime for upgrades.