People often find it odd when I say I don’t play PC games, but it seems rather complicated (and also expensive) to me.

I mean, I enjoyed it back when I had friends with PS, but I never had to set up anything myself. Searching around it seems rather… overwhelming, and I don’t know if it’s actually the case.

  1. PC seems most versatile, and with the prices, I considered piracy, but I would need a separate computer for security. Hell, I wouldn’t even trust the device firmware on it afterwards.
  2. So I considered maybe paying the amounts, but I went to check some games and lo and behold, kernel-level anti-cheat. Great, so pirated games might even have less malware in the end.
  3. Since I’d need a separate device anyway, how about getting a PlayStation. With a disc drive, I want to be able to go future proof and fully offline. Well, about that… apparently it needs to verify the disc drive online. For what? It’s a BluRay drive, either it works or it doesn’t. And then I heard another shitty thing, “most games are released almost unplayable and need updates right away”. So they just release Alpha quality software on the most permanent medium???

So that just sounds like shitty experience no matter what. How is it actually? I’d expect consoles to be least buggy and fully future proof.
The only thing I ever had was a $4 NES bootleg console from AliExpress, Contra was glitched out and Battletank unplayable because they forgot the select button, but ok, $4.

  • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)OP
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    9 hours ago

    I was just checking around for GTA, and there comes my “future proof”.

    I thought I could get a used copy on DVD. First I checked GTA SA, apparently not usable because modern Windows dropped support for SecuROM which is required, and it probably wouldn’t magically work under Wine either.
    And I’ve found cheap boxed GTA V, except that apparently the activation code is single use, linked to account and non-transferable, so those discs are not very useful.

    With consoles, you can buy a used disc and use it. And it also won’t randomly stop working because the software became “old”.

    For PC, I think this is the case where piracy simplifies things.

    • Kristell@herbicide.fallcounty.omg.lol
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      8 hours ago

      That… Is a fair point, yeah. The older software you want to run, the more complicated it ends up getting, either through VMs or software emulation.

      For GTA:SA specifically it has a gold rating for version 1, and bronze for version 2 on the WINE app database, so it would actually run through Linux, probably with some tinkering. Not sure if there are differences between the PC and PS2 versions, but if there aren’t then you could always run the PS2 version through an emulator as well.