I just don’t get how people spend +$500 on a PS5 or an *Xbox to play games that barely work, and the friggin’ thing constantly wasting 500 Watts of power. 🔥⚡

While i spent the same amount of money on a used laptop from 2019, where i can replay my favorite games from the PS2 era (and discovering some hidden gems along the way) using only 45W. 🔌💡🔋🍃

*At least the Series S does makes sense to me, since it’s a lot cheaper and efficent, and it’s mainly targeted for lightweight or previous gen titles.

  • @WARPed1701D@wayfarershaven.eu
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    510 months ago

    Patient Gamers might be a community that interests you. https://lemmy.ml/c/patientgamers

    My PC is over 7 years old now. It was cutting edge at the time of build (because of VR) and it can still play many of the new titles that come out with medium/high graphics, but generally, however, I don’t bother with new releases. Most new releases in modern gaming are cripplingly expensive bug filled messes that are close to being unplayable for at least 6 months to a year after release. Recent games I’ve played/replayed are Monkey Island, and Syberia which are both over 15 years old. There is a huge library of great older games to dive into using older tech without chasing the latest shiny release that has grabbed everyone’s attention or having to upgrade your hardware every year.

    When I do upgrade I will again buy hardware just below cutting edge. Not the best you can get as it usually has a crushing price premium but as good as is reasonable and affordable as it provides longevity and reduced waste over constant low level upgrades (hence my 7 year old gaming PC). Second hand is of course always an option especially now the era of GPU powered crypto mining has passed and you can probably buy used graphics cards now that haven’t been thrashed to within an inch of their lives.

    • GranixoOP
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      110 months ago

      Will check it out, thanks!

  • @GlennMagusHarvey@mander.xyz
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    10 months ago

    Always good to see two of my interests intersecting :D

    Anyway yeah I love playing older games and low-hardware-requirements games. I find that they’re also generally more accessible because of that.

    And there’s far more games than anyone will ever play in a lifetime. Not even all the games one wants to play.

    There are maybe some concerns that older hardware does use more electricity, but that’s probably more than made up by not buying new devices, unless you’re using them very heavily.

    • GranixoOP
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      10 months ago

      Older PC hardware does generally consume more power, yeah.

      But old consoles? pffft anything that came before the PS3 and X360 was even lucky to consume more than 35 Watts of power. ⚡

  • IONLYpost
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    10 months ago

    Also see CRTgaming where you can find real zerowaste gaming.

    • GranixoOP
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      10 months ago

      CRTs certainly DO waste electricity⚡🔌💸

      And they are hazardous for your health since they emmit low-powered X-Rays (which is harmless for short periods of time, but speding days, months, or years in front of a CRT or Plasma TV can be a potential cause of cancer). ☢️💀

      If you can, please use LED or LCD 🖥️💻

  • @zoe@lemm.ee
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    110 months ago

    apparently rendering 4k is not eco friendly…also it doesn’t help that modern games aren’t really that optimized…u can’t really blame sony only, but i get where u coming from

    • GranixoOP
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      10 months ago

      Anything higher than 1080p is definetly NOT eco-friendly (thus far)

        • GranixoOP
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          19 months ago

          My point is that current gen consoles use 500W of power (and PCs use up to 2000W) while your average retro setup tipically uses 45-125W.