"Games that take four or five years time now could take 10 years to develop," warned Ian Shaw, chief technology officer with games giant Electronic Arts.
madphilb wrote:PC programming does generate some headaches and additional work for you at times though. Since PCs are all a bit different (hardware, setup, etc.) you need to be patching something all the time or have a very good set of beta testers (a big, diverse circle). The work/headaches get even bigger if you cross-platform (i.e. - Windows, Linux, and/or Mac).
Bobtheduck wrote:There are a crap load of cheap PC games... Starting on the PC is fine, but the genre of games I would like to work with doesn't do well in the PC market... Even though programming is programming and it's all possible in PC and in Consoles, the plain fact is that certain genres only sell well in consoles and certain genres only really sell well in PC... That's why I would only develop for consoles, except for maybe during the time I was getting experience.
I don't think PC gaming holds the key to a breaking into the game industry. It's too easy to go low quality and cult following on that. Instead, it needs to be a top of the line dedicated console development.
Volt wrote:I agree, the image of PC gaming is poor, people head towards consoles because they don't have to worry about upgrades, installation, virus's, crashing, or the compatability. Plus consoles have a very exclusive feel to them..Not everyone can design for a console...That's the point, it makes you stand out more. I mean I can grab RPG Maker 2000 and make a game in 5 min. and attempt to sell it. But console marketing is more...Feals more Grand. more exclusive.
Volt wrote: Ahhh I see. Well what if Apple came out with their own console??? OOOOOooooo and so the plot thickens...
JediSonic wrote:I think there are valid points to be made for console OR PC games, and that's why there are so many of both coming out all the time. If you are a small-time developer or just getting off your feet, obviously PC is the way to go. On the other hand, unless I'm playing an FPS or RTS game, or something that requires typing, I would much rather use a gamecube controller and look at better graphics than my Celeron processor can manage On the other other hand, there is also modding and things that Tycho has mentioned. Just my $0.02
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