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Yeah, unfortunate incidents do happen with PCs as well, but I was taking about the replacement and repair costs of the xbox 360 system in particular specifically because of how widespread the issues with it were. I would say at least half of xbox 360 owners who bought the original xbox 360 ended up having to repaired it at least once, and many (including myself) have to have it repaired multiple times. So considering how widespread repairs were on that console in particular I think it's completely fair to factor in repair/replacement costs into the total cost of the console.TehCookie said:PCs can break as well, I had my liquid CPU coolant leaked and sprayed crap all over my PC. Thankfully I only had to replace that part instead of my entire PC which somehow managed to survive being drenched. My brother was not as lucky, overheated his computer and it burst into flames so he had to buy an entirely new one. Unfortunate incidents do not add into the average cost.Dirty Hipsters said:Well, to be fair about cost, think about it like this:
The Xbox 360 is 7 years old now. Therefore, if someone got an xbox on launch and that xbox hasn't failed on him (I know, it's a huge stretch, but it's a hypothetical), then that person would have had his Xbox 360 for 7 years while only paying $400 (or whatever the launch price of the Xbox 360 was, I honestly don't remember).
Now on the flip side, does anyone use a 7 year old PC for playing modern games? Hell no. So if someone got a new gaming PC at the same that that the xbox 360 was released, they've more than likely upgraded that PC at least once.
Therefore, the Xbox 360 would still cost less if it survived for the entire console cycle than a PC would.
Now, of course we live in the real world where this isn't necessarily the case. My Xbox 360 has died 3 times, so the initial cost of $400 + $300 worth of repairs + $50 a year of Xbox Live puts the grand total at $1050. Combine that with the much greater cost of games on the Xbox 360 versus the PC, and the two platforms come out to cost about the same, even if you end up having to upgrade your PC in the middle of the console cycle.
So I definitely wouldn't say that PC gaming costs less than console gaming, it ends up costing the same amount, or more depending on the PC you get, but while the costs are about equal, you do get a better experience on the PC, what with being able to play more games, at higher resolutions, with better graphics, and with mods.
Also I'm using a non-upgraded 7 year old PC to play modern games, due to games being multiplatform most games are developed to run on consoles which means they also play on my console-level PC.
As far as using your non-upgraded 7 year old PC to play modern games, I gotta ask, which games are you playing? Because I'm going to be really impressed if you say you're playing Max Payne 3, or Bioshock Infinite, or Metro 2033, or Deus Ex Human Revolution on 7 year old hardware.