Comment on 60% of PC gamers have no plans to build a new PC in the next two years — AI pricing crunch on RAM and other components paralyze enthusiast market

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Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com ⁨2⁩ ⁨weeks⁩ ago

From my own experience I would say that you’re probably not finding a chance to do intermediary upgrades because upfront you bought the top-range everything and maxed out things like memory and storage, and/or did not get a really good hobbyist motherboard (which the one part where you should really splurge).

I don’t get into the muggers’ game of top-range were you pay 2x-3x for just an extra 10% but instead get the stuff at the sweet-spot of price-performance, and then some years latter I can get stuff with what was before top-range performance at normal prices without a premium.

Similarly I don’t max out on things like memory and storage from the very start - I get what I need then and when I see that I need more I get more, by which point normally (not this shit going on right now) Moore’s Law means it’s way cheaper.

For example, the PC I’m using now for gaming recently got an improved CPU which wasn’t even out when I first bought this PC and which was top range back then (as server CPU, even), which would’ve been $200 back then but was only $17 second hand some years later.

Of course, this way of doing things got totally fucked up with this PC parts bubble. Frankly the last PC upgrade I did was replacing Windows with Linux which in terms of how it feels was equivalent to a speed and memory upgrade.

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