We build custom gaming PCs, so you'd expect us to say a PC is always better. It isn't. Here's the honest comparison.
Where a gaming PC wins
- Resolution and framerate. A mid-range gaming PC ($1,499–$1,899) will run most games at 1440p/144fps — something a current-gen console can't match. The PC just has more headroom.
- It does other things. The same machine you game on handles work, video editing, streaming, content creation. A console doesn't. This matters more than people think when you're thinking about total cost of ownership.
- No subscription required to play online. Xbox Game Pass and PS Plus are ongoing costs. PC gaming requires no subscription to access your game library online.
- Game prices. Steam sales are real. A $60 console game routinely goes for $10–15 on PC within a year. The savings add up fast.
- Upgradeable. When the GPU gets long in the tooth, you swap the GPU. You don't buy a new system.
Where a console wins
- Simplicity. Plug in, download, play. No drivers, no settings, no compatibility questions. If you want the fastest path from box to game, a console wins.
- Couch gaming. Playing on a TV from a couch is a different experience, and consoles are built for it. You can do this with a PC but it requires more setup.
- Upfront cost. A PS5 or Xbox Series X costs $500. A comparable gaming PC costs $999+. The console is cheaper to start — the PC is cheaper over time, but that takes a few years to play out.
- Some exclusives. Certain titles are console-only. If those games matter to you, the platform matters.
The real answer
If you want the best gaming experience, you have the budget, and you use a computer for other things anyway — get a PC. If you want to spend less upfront, keep things simple, or play specific console exclusives — get a console. Both are fine. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise.
If you're leaning toward a PC and want to know where to start, the build finder takes about 2 minutes.