this post was submitted on 08 Apr 2024
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I feel like I see a fair amount of gaming laptops in the US but a majority of people seem to still game on desktop. I guess what I am looking for is a ratio of one versus the other otherwise a country like China might dominate on numbers alone.

When looking for searching online for this I was mostly coming across pros and cons lists. This isn't what I am after.

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[–] Stovetop@lemmy.world 3 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

I can't speak for everyone obviously, but my own observations lead me to believe that laptop gaming is the most "accessible" of the options for someone who wants to game on PC based on the use cases below:

Consoles are the cheapest route to play games, with a PS5 costing US$500. You get the console exclusives, but you lose the flexibility/mods/enhancements PC gaming provides, which is why some people prefer PC gaming. However, realistically, a decent gaming PC in the current market is going to cost 3 or 4 times the cost of a PS5.

That being said, one justification for the higher cost of a gaming PC is that most people need a computer anyways. The PS5 might only be $500, but if you need a computer on top of that, the difference in cost slims a bit. But in terms of what kind of computer the average person needs, you're going to see a hard trend towards portability. A computer you can carry around is far more convenient than one you can't.

If you opt for a desktop PC, you address the "I need a computer anyways" use case, but not the "I need a computer for school/work" one. Unless you can satisfy your mobile computing needs with just a smartphone, chances are you need a laptop anyways (or maybe a tablet) and it creates a similar added cost issue we see with the PS5+laptop situation.

So if you don't have the budget for two computers, you go for the option that attempts to do it all—the gaming laptop. They run games, they're portable, and in many cases more affordable than desktops with equivalent components.

But the tradeoff is that they don't really do any of these things well. They run games, but form factor/heat output prevent most gaming laptops from being "Ultra Settings" capable. They are portable, but typically weigh a lot more than standard laptops and have a battery life of just a couple hours. They are more affordable, but then when you want to upgrade or if one component gives out, you have to replace the entire thing because everything is on one board.

[–] CorrodedCranium@leminal.space 2 points 7 months ago (1 children)

What regions of the world do you think that would correspond with though?

[–] Stovetop@lemmy.world 3 points 7 months ago

Regions, I am not sure. Demographics, I'd say PC gamers whose total electronics budget does not exceed $1500-2000.