Personally, I'm one of those weird Linux-only PCMR peoples.
I finally had enough takehome income to start affording consoles and such right about the time that consoles lost all advantages to me.
Consoles used to be about a couple of things, for me:
More powerful for the money, partly because people could write to the specific hardware, partly because of more esoteric (but effective) architectures, partly because they were often sold at a loss.
You could buy something and play it and come back to it, and the company can't just decide "nope, time to remotely remove it so people get the new shiny instead"
You can buy something and play it and the company can't 1984-retcon things out from under you.
And now...
Consoles are essentially just the same PC architecture as everything else (Exception of Nintendo, though they have other issues.). With more lockdown and higher-level SDKs required, making it difficult-to-impossible to write to the hardware, so you lose that advantage too. And the scales are such that you don't even really have the advantage of economies of scale, as they are just using, well, pc parts.
Everything is internet-required now. Good luck playing Driver: San Francisco, for instance. Meanwhile, I still play Stars! sometimes via wine.
See 2.
So, consoles lost me. I don't bother. I'm purely PCMR now.
(That all being said: this is all me-centric. And I have no issues with discussions of xbox / etc / etc.)
Personally, I'm one of those weird Linux-only PCMR peoples.
I finally had enough takehome income to start affording consoles and such right about the time that consoles lost all advantages to me.
Consoles used to be about a couple of things, for me:
And now...
So, consoles lost me. I don't bother. I'm purely PCMR now.
(That all being said: this is all me-centric. And I have no issues with discussions of xbox / etc / etc.)
Jargon is the term :-)