Someone stated that consoles are cheaper... How?
Because I can pick up an Xbox360 for $199 that plays Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2, Left for Dead 2, and Battlefield Bad Company 2. I've yet to find a PC at this price point that can.
More often than not, PC's are upgraded for something that has nothing to do with gaming--so that cost isn't even a factor.
I'm not sure if I agree with that. Many people that I know often buy new PC's to play the newest games. People often buy newer power supplies to power newer video cards and buy extra cooling to help overclock their systems to maximize performance. If people were simply going with PC's for things other than gaming...they would all be simply using onboard graphics. How many people who are regular posters on this board are running boxes with onboard graphics?
Whereas most of the mainstream and upper-mainstream cards can be had for less than $400 -- right on par with the cost of a console.
To be fair, $400 is 2x as much as a Xbox360 today. And lots of people are running these $300+ cards in SLI or Crossfire. So that doubles the cost, and often involves having to have stronger power supplies and more cooling to keep the case cool.
Matter of fact, I'll go on record to state that my two Radeons will last longer than most of your (first) Xbox360's! How many of those have you all had to go thru yet?
Of course, the Xbox360 is notorious for having hardware issues. This problem with this console is far and away a bigger problem that we have experienced with any of the other consoles in the past.
To answer your question, I am on my 2nd Xbox360 since May of 2006. First one purchased for $299 and second one purchased for $199. Since I don't game a ton, I considered not getting another console...but I already had the games and such sitting there....so it seemed a shame to not have a working console to use them.
But what of the games themselves? Every Sunday sales paper I see NEW RELEASE console games going for $60! The same on PC is $30 to $50 -- how is a console cheaper?
Guess it depends upon the context.
Let's imagine a family with a single parent (mom) and a son. Lets say Mom currently has 1 laptop in the house that her and her son use. If the kid gets interested in gaming, she has a choice to make. Either buy her son a console for around $300...or purchase a new computer for around $800-$1,200 (because she will need a monitor, etc) that will play games that are similar or better.
So, lets say Mom gets a PC for exactly $1,000. Let's say she gets a PS3 for $300. So, we have $700 difference on day 1. If the PC version of the game is $30 and the PS3 version is $60, it would take purchasing 24 games at that price difference for the total investment of the console $1740, to exceed the PC at $1720.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that PC gaming is bad....but I think there is clearly a market for both platforms. And I still believe that consoles are the best bang for the buck way to get there. If you have more money to spend are and passionate about computers, you may spend more, but it might be more worth it to you in the end.