1. "High end" CPUs? Mine's an AMD Athlon x2 6000+ 3.0 dual core and I spent <$200 for it. That's skyrocketing? When I bought it I think the 3.2 dual core was the highest AMD on the market. Granted Intel has quad-cores now, (which are fairly new) but last time I checked when dual core launched it, too, was ridiculously expensive. Such is the price one pays for wanting the ABSOLUTE BEST technology.
2. This is only in reference to Crysis. You're going to nag that you can't run one of the most resource intensive games on full settings, you should know full well that there's no video game console in the world that can run it either, then.
Also, unless SLI has changed recently (I haven't ran it since it first came out with 6600GTs) then the resource gain isn't 3x with 3 cards, or 2x with 2 cards. It's 1.5x with 2 and 2x with 3. nVidia may have made it better, I'm honestly unsure.\
DX10 is also fairly new "technology" it'll take awhile before hardware that can FULLY utilize it becomes more readily available and affordable.
3. While most games are cross-platform from PC to Console, my monitor has a better resolution than my television. Sure, I can spend $1500 for a high-def television, but then this defeats the purpose of saying a $1500 gaming PC is overpriced in comparison to getting the same resolution off of a $2000 console system with the cost of a good television included.
Albiet you can do other things with a television, but I find myself doing other things than gaming on my gaming rig. Don't you?
Also, to me, nothing beats the TOTAL control of mouse-and-keyboard setup. No console controller will EVER come close. Online gaming is much more effecient when done via a PC than a video game system (in my opinion) because the processors aren't handling the load, PCs have a dedicated LAN "processor" if you will.
PCs always have been and always will be superior, and the biggest plus is you don't have to wait 4-5 years for an "upgrade" in the technology like you do with consoles (Which require you to COMPLETELY scrap the old one) every year or less I can upgrade any component to my PC to the highest standards if I so chose, and I always have a "non-techy" friend I can pawn my old components off to in one way or another.
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