I'm going to say it: our obsession with pure specs and fps counts is making PC gaming a less fun, more toxic place.
We've turned games into spreadsheets. The conversation is dominated by "Can it run Crysis?" benchmarks and shaming anyone who dares to use Medium settings. We prioritize raw power over artistry, modding, niche genres, and the sheer joy of a game that runs well on a five-year-old GPU.
This constant one-upmanship:
We've turned games into spreadsheets. The conversation is dominated by "Can it run Crysis?" benchmarks and shaming anyone who dares to use Medium settings. We prioritize raw power over artistry, modding, niche genres, and the sheer joy of a game that runs well on a five-year-old GPU.
This constant one-upmanship:
- Scares away newcomers who think they need a $2000 rig just to start.
- Makes developers optimize for benchmark headlines rather than stable, creative experiences.
- Overshadows what makes PC gaming truly unique: customization, backwards compatibility, and a library no platform can match.
