• conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      A. It’s not $600.

      B. Games on PC are far less than used discs are.

      C. Gamepass is not and does not in any way resemble a budget option. The budget option is owning games so you don’t routinely have new expenses to be able to play games all. Renting is and always has been an obscenely expensive way to play games.

        • conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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          11 months ago

          A. Yes, that version is extremely popular.

          B. It’s not remotely close. Selling back physical games is still terrible value compared to discounts on Pc

          C. Gamepass gave itself away for a while as a promotional gimmick. That’s not what it costs. The literal only possible explanation for habitually renting games is that you’re terrible with money. It’s by far the worst budget option by a huge margin. It’s not a legitimate choice for someone with limited funds. The day you stop paying, your library disappears.

            • conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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              11 months ago

              Every number you gave was a lie with no basis in reality. The steam deck isn’t $600. Game pass isn’t $70 for 1 year, let alone 3. Abusing promos that no longer exist doesn’t support your case, even ignoring that the library is terrible.

              Then you’re comparing it to full retail price ignoring that the entire discussion was that PC games are available heavily discounted with regularity. And again, the fact that as soon as you can’t pay $30/month for GameFly and Gamepass, your “library” is gone.

        • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          That math is so wrong on so many reasons. Let’s compare it

          Device Steam Deck Xbox
          Cheapest official price 339 549.99
          Subscription fee 0 14.99/month
          Initial games all of your steam library (800+ games for me) 0
          Emulator support Yes No
          Base cost after a year 339 729.87

          This means that I have 390.87 to spend in games before we break even. Let’s see how many games I can buy with that, to do that in a way that’s as impartial as possible I’ll look at the top most played games to try to not put my bias for games I prefer and add their lowest recorded price (since steam sales are common place) on steam until I reach the 390 I have to spend. This gets me to number 33 on the top 100 most played games. It’s worth noting that if I add emulators, free games, and the fact that I personally prefer to buy a lot of indie games than spend 120 into two football manager games, I can easily make those 390 get me a LOT more games. But here’s the biggest kicker, if one month I’m short on cash I can play any of the hundreds games I have, you unfortunately if you don’t pay gamepass are out of games. Also in a few years when you need to buy a new console you’ll lose all your games except the ones Microsoft allows you to keep playing, so in the long run you get to where I’am, i.e. having a large curated list of games that you like and can play without having to pay.

          To add insult to injury, I get to play my games on the go, and the suspend/resume midgame feature means I’m back in my game within seconds, not having to wait until my Xbox finished playing the Call of Duty ad

          Sources:

          • PieMePlenty@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            Look, I agree with you but let’s not cherry pick the Xbox numbers just because we don’t like it. Series S is cheaper than that. With Xbox you also bring your 360(some, digital), xbo library with you. Subscription is optional and emulator support is available with dev mode - Microsoft didn’t lock it out and it’s a very viable emulator machine.

            Imo Deck is still better value but if you have your history on Xbox, a series s isn’t a that far off if you are on a budget - gamepass or not.

            It’s hard to compare them anyway. One is a console and one a portable PC. Really different use cases and markets.

            • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              Yes (to de series S), but he specifically mentioned buying used discs, and the series S is digital only, so it’s not viable for what he’s proposing. Also yes (for the 360 games), but it’s only some and only the games you bought digitally, so his arguments of buying cheap used games also moots this point. Subscription is not optional if you want to play online, which granted I personally don’t care, but his argument was Xbox+gamepass+used games was a better cost benefit than Steam Deck, so he’s including gamepass in his budged for Xbox so to remove it it would be a different point from what he was making.

              Did not know about the emulator, glad to hear that, I thought because it was a console it would have been a lot more closed than that. In any case the emulator didn’t factor in the price of anything, it’s just because I like to play a lot of old games on my deck so that gives me hours of fun for free, glad to know people with Xbox are also able to enjoy it.

    • golli@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      Here in Germany I can get it certified refurbished for 340€ (64gb), 440€ (256gb) or 540€ (540€). You can go for the cheapest and upgrade the storage. Seems affordable to me.

      First of all why are we comparing a handheld to a console? That just doesn’t make any sense.

      And since when are games for consoles cheaper anyways? Seems like PC games go on sales much faster.

      For any PC gamer with an existing library (or any pirate) you already have plenty of games to play on the steam deck. No need to buy anything new.

      Also don’t some games on the playstation for example need a subscription for online play?

      That said you are right that if you want access to a large variety of games then game pass+Xbox is a solid option. But look at streaming services and mark my words: this won’t last forever. They WILL enshittfy it eventually.

        • Fisch@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          I’m very sure most people don’t buy a new game every month. I don’t even know how you would find the time to finish them that fast.

          Edit: I just noticed 30 games a year means more than 2 new games a month. Are you speedrunning them or something?!

    • helenslunch@feddit.nl
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      11 months ago

      Budget? It’s $600 for a device that’s already worse off then a console power wise.

      Are we really comparing this thing to a console? Because that’s a whole other conversation of the economics of PC vs. console in general.

      Compare it to any other handheld and even the maximum price of $600 looks very appealing.

      But you can buy the $400 one, spend another $50 and get a 1TB SSD to swap in. Yes, this does require some special knowledge but not super hard and worth noting regardless.

      That’s without getting into the variety of hardware and software features this thing has that none of those other ones do.

        • Fisch@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          How tf is a disc supposed to fit in a handheld? It would have so many downsides and people haven’t been buying discs for pc games for years now

            • Fisch@lemmy.ml
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              11 months ago

              I’m pretty sure there are no cartridges for PC games at all

                • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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                  11 months ago

                  No portability, either, though that’s kinda irrelevant if you’re using a steam deck in the first place.

                  More importantly, no ownership. Steam, or any other digital media outlet, can just invalidate the licence, change the terms of the license, invalidate the account it’s under, etc.

                  While physical media has risks of its own, you are as much in control of those risks as you want to be. You only really have to worry about theft and catastrophic damage to the media, as those tend to be beyond complete individual control. With proper care, even discs can last a lifetime at least. Cartridges can last longer in theory.

                  We haven’t run into it yet problems with it, but what about inheritance? There are people today that inherited games and consoles. That’s not an exaggeration, there were adults around for the first gen consoles that bought them, and have died in the last ten years. Their kids or grandkids now have them.

                  There’s zero way to prevent inheritance of physical media. But licenses? Once some of the accounts get old enough, I guarantee that there’s going to be a wave of those accounts being shut down for bullshit reasons that are just an excuse to prevent anyone from passing the games down (and I’m as confident that, unless legislation occurs, Google and apple and whatever other companies use digital sales will find a way to ban inheritance of digital media).

                  I’m not saying I object to the lack of physical media in every case, and a portable unit is a reasonable thing to not add the extra ports to (unlike a larger console, imo). There’s a use case for that. But the attempt to kill physical media sure as hell isn’t a good thing, it’s driven by what benefits the companies, not what’s best for customers.

        • mriormro@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          I haven’t had a device with the ability to read discs in over 10 years. The last portable gaming device that could read optical discs was the PSP, as far as I can recall. Which came out in 2011.

          Again, what are you on about with the steam deck not being able to read discs as a criticism? It’s outlandish. To the point where I’m not even sure you know what a steam deck is.

            • mriormro@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              Disc, cartridge, same shit. You are focusing on the media because the lot of you don’t understand what it is to be able to resell it rent games.

              Your criticism was specifically with the fact that it didn’t have the capability to read discs. Something concerning the medium by which you can get to a game. I commented on that. If you want to talk about the latter than I place more value on owning my games and I’d rather not rent. Also, it’s not worth the effort for me to try to sell a physical copy of a game.

              The simple fact remains I play more games that I want than you for cheaper by renting them. And this pisses people off

              Why would that piss anyone off? Why would anyone even care? The way we consume media is personal and different for everyone. You seem to place a lot of value on the amount of games you’ve played over the course of a year. Other people, shockingly, might not.

    • lucas@startrek.website
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      11 months ago

      Not sure why people here are all arguing about why you would want to use discs, rather than the fact that the Steam Deck is a PC, of course you can absolutely used discs. All you need to do is plug in a USB disc drive, and it’s ready to go. I’ve installed a bunch of my older PC games from CD/DVD that way, and it works great. Even under Linux, applications like Lutris make installing Windows game discs pretty easy, and once they’re installed, you’re ready to go.

    • Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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      11 months ago

      Damn get a load of this guy listing physical discs as if it’s a good thing in 2023. The experience of owning a game on Steam is so seamless and convenient I couldn’t even handle the frustration of SD cards on the switch let alone a full on disc!

      Of course the situation would be different if you live somewhere with a poor internet connection and you play mostly AAA games, then I understand the appeal of having physical media.

      EDIT: Also have to add, $600 for a device that can play literally every game I’ve purchased for the last 20 years anywhere I go is a damn bargain. Consoles have their place and their own advantages but there’s really no other device that can do that.

    • theonyltruemupf@feddit.de
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      11 months ago

      The value lies in its flexibility. And it’s mainly targeted for existing PC players. I can play my whole 150+ games steam library on it. I can easily emulate my favourite childhood games. Also, the smallest version with like a 256 or 512 GB SD card is perfectly fine and a lot cheaper than 600$.

      There are use cases where a traditional console is cheaper of course, but you can’t get AAA handheld gaming for less money.