One of my close friends decided that she’s no longer enjoying games so she offered to sell it to me for really cheap (100$). I love gaming but since I switched to Mac a few years ago my choices have been very limited. I’ve been mostly playing indie games that are available on Mac. So I’ve been thinking about her offer.

The price sounds amazing but I’m not sure if it’s still worth it considering the PS5 has been out for a good few years now. What do you guys think? Should I take it off her hands or should I save for a PS5 or an Xbox instead?

My main monitor is 1080p 75Hz by the way (Acer KG221Q). So buying a new generation console would mean that I might have to upgrade my monitor as well.

Edit to add: A new PS5 would cost 7 times as much in my country. That’s also another thing to consider.

  • bbbhltz@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I still buy games for my PS4 and I am a very casual gamer who never plays online.

    Picked up SF6 this month and it is awesome.

  • PelicanPersuader@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Oh yeah, all the time. I’ve never finished Skyrim because it feels so overwhelming. No Man’s Sky presents a similar kind of challenge for me, though that one also pings my danger sense really hard - I have this weird fear of deep water and space. Places where I can’t see what’s on the other side and might come after me. That’s why I’ll never play Subnautica.

  • Dee@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I’m still rocking my PS4 Pro and haven’t felt the need to upgrade to the PS5 yet. Plenty of good games on there and a lot of the new ones still release to PS4 too. There’s cool exclusives on PS5 but not $500 cool exclusives imo. Well, closer to $600 after purchasing the game. So I’ll continue to wait to upgrade. I’d say go for it because you can have a lot of fun on the PS4 still.

  • specialneedz@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    An Xbox Series S might be a happy middle ground. It’s current gen, like the Series X, but with a lower resolution target 1080p or 1440p generally, compared the the PS5 and Xbox Series X 4K. It’s significantly cheaper too.

    PS4 and Xbox One won’t be getting any more first party games, and increasingly less and less first party ones.

    Although if your friend is chucking in her games too, could be worth it if you haven’t played them.

    • IronTwo@beehaw.orgOP
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      1 year ago

      Funnily enough, I have another friend that wants to sell his Series S and switch to PlayStation. A while ago he said he’s willing to sell it for 200 bucks. But I had have heard so many negative things about the Series S I kindly rejected his offer. Negative things such as how most games are capped at 30 fps, how the games look blurry, how it’s holding back the quality games that would have been developed if it didn’t exist etc. I can ask him if he’s still looking for a buyer actually, but again, I don’t know if the Series S is a good console. It certainly doesn’t seem to have the reputation PS4 has.

  • worfamerryman@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    You might be able to jailbreak it and play emulators on it. I think even if I couldn’t I’d pick it up for $100, but if I could modify it, I’d totally pick up the ps4

  • LucyLastic@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    The Doom 1.0 demo, at the time, fitted on one and a half HD 3.5" floppy disks and was absolutely mindblowing. It really felt like taking a look into the future of virtual reality and showed what the peak technology of the time (silky smooth on a 486 DX2 with a PCI graphics card … there was one at school I had access to, lol) was capable of!

    Not a game, but the State of the Art demo for the Amiga was similarly mindblowing … a full music video on one SH floppy disk :-)

  • Leafeytea@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I don’t know that looking at games as a release is necessarily a great vantage point, but they can certainly be seen as a haven for fun if you approach them with an open mind.

    For me it was more of a switch from how I played vs what I played. I got into online MMOs some years ago and (like a lot of things I do in my life…) I threw myself into them for a while like a loony. I found I was investing far too much time and energy organizing events, raids, builds, spreadsheets, people, personalities, drama, ugh. It was like going to work for heaven’s sake! 😂

    Eventually I got burned out and stopped completely. When COVID hit, of course going out wasn’t an option so I got back into playing more again but realized that I could still have fun without the whole hardcore approach. I became, for lack of a better description, part of the “filthy casuals” lol - something I have never for a minute regretted. My time is my own, I chase what I like, meet others in game, and just plain have fun now.