Paige, this argument is retarded. I'm not against PC gaming. I've got kick-ass gaming computer that 99% of the hardest of the hardcore PC gamers would envy. It's not like you have to be in one camp or the other. You've already conceded one of my points, which is all it takes. For people who just want to play games and are starting from scratch, consoles are better. You talk like consoles are useless, yet there is a use.
And yes, affordable and accessible. I wasn't exaggerating when I said a $2000 machine. You're just misrepresenting (or misread) what I said. I said Xbox 2 and PS3 perform at the level of a $2,000. Obviously I don't think that a 4-year old console (PS2 or Xbox) can compete with a brand new $2000 machine. But when those two systems were released 4 years ago, yes, you needed a $2000 machine to match their gameplaying power. Your $1000 system may outperform the Xbox today, but then the Xbox doesn't cost $300 anymore; it costs $150.
Your suggestion that they aren't significantly optimizing games for the systems is just blind ranting from a PC fanboy. Halflife 2 and Doom 3 are going to be released soon for the Xbox. The Xbox has a 733 Mhz pentium processor and 64 MB of shared memory for both system RAM and Video RAM (that's from memory, so those specs may be off, but not by much). The minimum requirements to play Doom on a PC are a 1.5 Ghz Pentium, 384 MB RAM and a DirectX 9.0b compatible videocard with 64 MB of its own memory. And you know as well as I know that if you just barely meet the minimum requirements listed on the box, even if you turn off all the visual and audio special effects and crank down the resolution you will almost always still have an unacceptable framerate, especially in a FPS. Doom 3 will not even run. It won't even load, if you don't have a system that is at least twice as powerful as the Xbox in every aspect. And when it does run with that bare minimum it is only by turning off every extra feature, while the game running on the Xbox actually has most of the effects enabled and running well. All this on a 4-year old xbox. 4 years ago a $3000 PC would get you a bleeding edge system with the just barely released 1 Ghz pentium and 512 MB RD-RAM. 4 years ago a PC capable of even running Doom 3 did not even exist. How exactly to they accomplish this feat on the Xbox without optimization???
And yes, accessible. You put in a disc, push a button and 10 seconds later you're playing the game. Many people don't want to install games. They don't want to figure out why the game crashes to the desktop every as soon as they beat the first level. They don't want to figure out why they are getting 3 FPS even though they own a top-of-the-line system. They don't want to buy, or are unable to afford, a machine that will cost more than $1000 (more than $2000 if you are comparing to a newly released console).
And for what it's worth, virtually every game for Xbox and Gamecube run in progressive scan if you've got a tv that supports it. Also, for what it's worth, Resident Evil 4, Metroid and Metroid Prime 2 all have no discernible load times.
Here are a few good reasons for you (and the average person) to own a console:
1- They are cheap, allowing even very poor people, and people who already invested in a gaming PC to buy one.
2- They are incredibly easy to use.
3- They will play cutting edge games for 4-5 years, and they will play them well.
4- You can rent the entire library of games for them (unlike the PC, for which you can rent no games for)
5- They are made to be played on a TV (a bigscreen TV even).
6- They lend themselves to a real social experience with real friends (not the ones merely represented by 1's and 0's over the internet.
7- They are fun.
8- There are MANY MANY MANY extremely fun, must-have games released for them that are never released for the PC.
9- So many people own them that there are lots of people to borrow games from.
Paige, repeat after me: You don't have to give up PC gaming in order to play Nintendo.
PC gaming is a good thing. Me no wants to give it up.