The state of PC gaming – from a PC gamer's perspective
by youre mom on Dec.17, 2008, under Opinions, PC
With graphs like this one (blamed on piracy among other things) a lot of people have been proclaiming that PC gaming’s death draws nigh. What this graph doesn’t say though, is that the numbers it gets for consoles is hardware and software sold in retail for all three consoles vs software sales of PC in retail. Thats right, not alienware PCs, not graphic cards, not gaming peripherals, not MMO subscriptions, not even digital sales.
While this graph is technically correct it gives a skewed picture of the situation to say the least.
It’s true that the last couple years have not been the best for PC gaming, partly thanks to PC getting down prioritized by several studios for their AAA titles (GTA4, Assassins Creed among others), but there are still several important niches that PC gaming fills that I don’t see any console competing for in the near future. Those niches, among others, are strategy, simulations, MMOs and e-sports. While consoles might catch up on the last two eventually I doubt they will replace PCs completely in either; the amount of people still playing Counter-Strike, Quake, Starcraft and other ten years or older tournament games combined with World of Warcraft’s complete dominance should be plenty proof of that.
As for the first two I don’t see consoles ever catching up, you simply won’t find Silent Hunter, Total War, Hearts of Iron, Operation Flashpoint, Close Combat, IL-2 Sturmovik, Capitalism or any of the other countless simulators and strategy games on any console.
So PC gaming has more merits than just being able to feel smug around console plebeians (though that is certainly a bonus).
Before anyone mentions that both Operation Flashpoint 2 and Armed Assault 2 will be for console, I am aware of that but if you’ve played the original you know that will be a dumbed-down experience, for example how many buttons are there on the Xbox 360 and PS3 controllers, 10-12? I used more buttons than that just to order my squad around in Operation Flashpoint 1 (by the way that game has the best squad interface/order system I’ve seen in any squad FPS), in fact I use more buttons than that for most games I play, which is another thing that separates PC gaming from console gaming. The difference between keyboard and gamepad is more than just higher accuracy in FPS games, they’re two different approaches to gaming. While gamepads are made for ease of use, a keyboard and mouse are made for precision and efficiency, and last but not least, customization. Which takes me to the my next point that PC gamers and console gamers are very different market segments. A game that sold well on console might not sell as well on PC (especially if it’s a halfhearted port six months after the console release) and vice versa of course, if ports of Hearts of Iron existed.
Thankfully some companies have realized this: SEGA bought the Total War franchise and Creative Assembly, THQ keeps publishing Relic’s games (and bought the Home World franchise from Vivendi last year), old school developers like id, Valve and Blizzard and a lot of smaller developers and publishers like Paradox and Stardock are all still supporting PC gaming. These guys just knows which platform is superior like this highly scientific and unbiased graph clearly shows.
And I still haven’t even touched on the subject of mods or the plethora of indie games. Lets face it, the day you get something like Dwarf Fortress for Xbox is the day we get a FOSS console, Mac steals user majority from Windows, World of Warcraft loses out to Warhammer Online, and PC gaming dies.



December 17th, 2008 on 9:02 pm
We have to stop looking at it as PC Gaming versus Console gaming.
That’s not what it’s about anymore. The war is over and nobody won.
Now console gaming as an alternative or complimentary experience to PC gaming is the way forward. Cross-platform play in the two games I’ve seen (one of which I own) is a brilliant and well implimented feature.
Things like Cross-Platform play are the way forward. Perhaps one day there’ll be a strategy game full of generals behind keyboards and squad leaders on joypads.
December 19th, 2008 on 7:55 am
As I see it there are game devs that want pc gaming dead! Look at all the untruthful statements over the years that pc gaming is dying. Then their is the fact pc gamers are treated like dirt. Some game devs evening saying pc gaming was unprofitable. All these these false attacks on pc gaming has hurt the platform.
Where are all the top high end games there is only a few. Guess what hardware sales also suffer because of that.