I'm definitely with the cheap PC games crowd here. I've never spent more than £15 on a game (exception: Battleforge, £19, but that's microtransaction stuff). Only two games have ever cost me £15, or indeed, more than a tenner. How? Steam, preowned stuff, yadda yadda. You also get more indie/freeware games on PC, although this is changing with the advent of XBLA and whatever the PS3 one's called.
I'd like to stick up for gaming laptops, actually. Now, they are more expensive, and you can't self-build, which is a pain. But I have no desk space at home, and in any case, the portability aspect is fantastic. My friends and I often have mini-LAN parties (two to four people) at uni, in people's rooms and whatnot. I looked around for the cheapest possible deal with the high specs I was after, and eventually settled on an Asus G51J-A1 from Btotech. Even with shipping it to the UK, it cost me £1050, a good price when you see what specs it has. Came with a free Razer Copperhead and everything.
When I've graduated, and am living in a house of my own, I'll have a proper PC. Until then, I'm sticking with this beauty. Using a gaming computer for everything has unexpected side benefits. I can run however many programs I want at the same time without a hitch of slowdown thanks to the i7-720QM (entry level or not, this thing is badass). I can watch movies, edit images and read web pages in crystal clear 1920x1080. And I can do this anywhere. The battery life is long enough for me to be able to use it in uninteresting lectures, doing work or playing Peggle. Great stuff.
Obligatory boast: yes, max settings. On everything. I turn the resolution down and AA off in Crysis, but otherwise it's Very High across the board if I so desire (currently experimenting with turning some stuff down to High, which seems to make no actual difference at 1280x720, and putting 2xAA on). Unreal Tournament 3 plays at a rock-solid glassy-smooth framerate at maximum-everything settings, which is pretty impressive for a laptop, even an expensive one.
But yeah, it mostly comes down to which types of games you prefer. FPSs, RTSs, certain RPGs and so on exist primarily on PC. Fighting games (sadly) prefer to live on consoles, along with sports games, which I couldn't care less about. Also, there are a lot of good PS3 exclusives by now. I'm not really tempted towards the 360 (all it has is GoW2/Halo 3, neither of which interest me that much as I can just get the originals for now) or the Wii (most Wii games inspire a solid 'meh' from me, and the console on the whole seems too gimmick-laden to inspire my respect). I want a PS3 though.
I'd like to stick up for gaming laptops, actually. Now, they are more expensive, and you can't self-build, which is a pain. But I have no desk space at home, and in any case, the portability aspect is fantastic. My friends and I often have mini-LAN parties (two to four people) at uni, in people's rooms and whatnot. I looked around for the cheapest possible deal with the high specs I was after, and eventually settled on an Asus G51J-A1 from Btotech. Even with shipping it to the UK, it cost me £1050, a good price when you see what specs it has. Came with a free Razer Copperhead and everything.
When I've graduated, and am living in a house of my own, I'll have a proper PC. Until then, I'm sticking with this beauty. Using a gaming computer for everything has unexpected side benefits. I can run however many programs I want at the same time without a hitch of slowdown thanks to the i7-720QM (entry level or not, this thing is badass). I can watch movies, edit images and read web pages in crystal clear 1920x1080. And I can do this anywhere. The battery life is long enough for me to be able to use it in uninteresting lectures, doing work or playing Peggle. Great stuff.
Obligatory boast: yes, max settings. On everything. I turn the resolution down and AA off in Crysis, but otherwise it's Very High across the board if I so desire (currently experimenting with turning some stuff down to High, which seems to make no actual difference at 1280x720, and putting 2xAA on). Unreal Tournament 3 plays at a rock-solid glassy-smooth framerate at maximum-everything settings, which is pretty impressive for a laptop, even an expensive one.
But yeah, it mostly comes down to which types of games you prefer. FPSs, RTSs, certain RPGs and so on exist primarily on PC. Fighting games (sadly) prefer to live on consoles, along with sports games, which I couldn't care less about. Also, there are a lot of good PS3 exclusives by now. I'm not really tempted towards the 360 (all it has is GoW2/Halo 3, neither of which interest me that much as I can just get the originals for now) or the Wii (most Wii games inspire a solid 'meh' from me, and the console on the whole seems too gimmick-laden to inspire my respect). I want a PS3 though.