I don't really agree with this.isiolia wrote:PC gaming has always been there, doing what it does, and largely it hasn't changed how consoles have worked. Mobile has iterated very quickly though, and come to represent a large chunk of the market.
Once Microsoft came out with the Xbox, it changed the whole PC game. Microsoft courted PC developers for Xbox, and gave them tools to make porting simple. PC developers started focusing on the Xbox version primarily, and then back porting to PC. This continued with the 360. Unfortunately the 360's lifespan lasted too long, and people start to choose the PC version of a game over its 360 version, due to the PC version having higher resolution and better framerates. That sexier tech coupled with the ease of Steam, made people start choosing PC over console more and more. Now that PC gaming is easier and cheaper than it ever has been, combined with powerful and easy to use port parity engines, it makes total sense why console manufacturers are struggling to compete with PCs. Especially since most of their console games have superior PC versions by default. Consoles are competing with PC, not mobile.
Yes, but the library of game types targeted for mobile are not analog to the library of game types targeted towards consoles. These are different worlds in both content and demographics.isiolia wrote:Mobile has iterated very quickly though, and come to represent a large chunk of the market.
If we're really going to embrace this tiered console concept, we might as well just make the consoles have modular CPUs, GPUs, APUs, RAM, whatever. So when it's time to upgrade the console, you just pull the part out, and insert the upgraded component. Yes that makes the console even more close to being a PC, except say the GPU upgrade will only come from the manufacturer of the console, so there's no compatibility issues to worry about. And the modular components will always be a known commodity for the developers as such.
I still don't like it though. I was happy with 5 year console lifespans, with consoles that I just pop a game in and it takes off running. No patching, no OS updates, no tiered system capability worries. Just pure and simple gaming bliss. But those days are behind us now and aren't coming back.