I think a lot of this sentiment is more true for the previous generation (PS4, XBOne) because those consoles could barely keep up with PCs at the time. The current generation of consoles have gotten so good that the average consumer would have a hard time telling a console and PC game apart. This is, of course, because the modern consoles are just gaming PCs themselves, with very tight integration.
Just think about your average dad who buys a TV at best buy. Now think about how he’s going to be so impressed by the on-by-default HDR feature on the PS5, and how he can also be sold on the home theater aspect where the device can play 8K Blu-Rays if he wants.
I’m not arguing that consoles are the best thing, or that they’re going to be the same forever, I’m just saying they have their place and I don’t think they’re going away.
There’s overhead to making consoles the way that they’re made now; not just R&D and manufacturing cycles, but think about the cert process, for instance, that doesn’t exist on PC. That overhead only makes sense at a certain scale. Economic factors are just changing how feasible it is to make a console the way that they’ve always been made, plus multiple countries’ legislation is finally breathing down these companies’ necks to destroy walled garden ecosystems, and Microsoft is attempting to get out ahead of it. The Steam Deck isn’t quite as easy as a traditional console, but it’s damn close for a competitive price, and it’s just a computer. I think we’re all expecting Microsoft’s next box and potential handheld to just do that but with Windows, and I honestly don’t know how Sony will adapt, but they’re in the process of adapting.
For my money, I think Sony will release a PlayStation store for PC, continue pushing the cloud thing, and start allowing third party app stores on consoles if and when they’re forced to by regulators.
We’re in such uncharted territory that I don’t think I’ll be able to predict it, but if Microsoft nails their next box, with its multiple stores and a bespoke version of Windows, which would make it capable of running Sony’s games that aren’t on “Xbox” today, I don’t know how Sony will be able to compete by being second to market. Anything can happen though, it just won’t involve PlayStation 6 succeeding by doing what PlayStation 5 did.
Very reasonable take. I’d like to toss a little bit of credit Sony’s way for their excellent controller design at least! I’ll keep buying consoles so long as games are still sold on physical media for them
Well, let me take a little bit of credit away from them then, because those controllers are needlessly mandatory, even for games that don’t make use of its features! How do you think fighting game players felt about that right as Sony bought the world’s biggest fighting game tournament and made all tournaments run on PS5? lol
You can plug them in, but PS4 format controllers don’t work on PS5 games; they only work on PS4 versions of games. You know, for all of that fancy rumble that’s meaningless when you’re playing Guilty Gear on a fightstick.
I think a lot of this sentiment is more true for the previous generation (PS4, XBOne) because those consoles could barely keep up with PCs at the time. The current generation of consoles have gotten so good that the average consumer would have a hard time telling a console and PC game apart. This is, of course, because the modern consoles are just gaming PCs themselves, with very tight integration.
Just think about your average dad who buys a TV at best buy. Now think about how he’s going to be so impressed by the on-by-default HDR feature on the PS5, and how he can also be sold on the home theater aspect where the device can play 8K Blu-Rays if he wants.
I’m not arguing that consoles are the best thing, or that they’re going to be the same forever, I’m just saying they have their place and I don’t think they’re going away.
There’s overhead to making consoles the way that they’re made now; not just R&D and manufacturing cycles, but think about the cert process, for instance, that doesn’t exist on PC. That overhead only makes sense at a certain scale. Economic factors are just changing how feasible it is to make a console the way that they’ve always been made, plus multiple countries’ legislation is finally breathing down these companies’ necks to destroy walled garden ecosystems, and Microsoft is attempting to get out ahead of it. The Steam Deck isn’t quite as easy as a traditional console, but it’s damn close for a competitive price, and it’s just a computer. I think we’re all expecting Microsoft’s next box and potential handheld to just do that but with Windows, and I honestly don’t know how Sony will adapt, but they’re in the process of adapting.
For my money, I think Sony will release a PlayStation store for PC, continue pushing the cloud thing, and start allowing third party app stores on consoles if and when they’re forced to by regulators.
We’re in such uncharted territory that I don’t think I’ll be able to predict it, but if Microsoft nails their next box, with its multiple stores and a bespoke version of Windows, which would make it capable of running Sony’s games that aren’t on “Xbox” today, I don’t know how Sony will be able to compete by being second to market. Anything can happen though, it just won’t involve PlayStation 6 succeeding by doing what PlayStation 5 did.
Very reasonable take. I’d like to toss a little bit of credit Sony’s way for their excellent controller design at least! I’ll keep buying consoles so long as games are still sold on physical media for them
Well, let me take a little bit of credit away from them then, because those controllers are needlessly mandatory, even for games that don’t make use of its features! How do you think fighting game players felt about that right as Sony bought the world’s biggest fighting game tournament and made all tournaments run on PS5? lol
You mean to tell me they couldn’t plug in their own USB controllers?!
You can plug them in, but PS4 format controllers don’t work on PS5 games; they only work on PS4 versions of games. You know, for all of that fancy rumble that’s meaningless when you’re playing Guilty Gear on a fightstick.