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In your opinion, is gaming an expensive hobby or a cheap hobby?

Where would you place videogames? Is it an expensive hobby?

  • Yes, it's in the "expensive" hobbies bracket

    Votes: 104 39.8%
  • No, it's in the "cheap" hobbies bracket

    Votes: 157 60.2%

  • Total voters
    261

Vick

Member
Definitely on the cheapest side including highest tier PC gaming.

Some hobbies are unfathomably expensive.

Try cycling, you could easily drop $3k on an entry level bike, not to mention the other gadgets you can obtain if you’re serious about tracking your progress.
Or even better, the million dollars affair which is serious audiophily. Or cars, movie props, watch collecting..
 
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Segaswirl

Member
As cheap or expensive as you want it to be. You can buy an older console with a bunch of games and get hours upon hours of entertainment or you can run out and buy a 4090.

For me personally with how I play games I would say it's pretty cheap. A game pass sub and the occasional new release.
 
I don't think the minimum cost point is a good defence of the price. People tend to overlook all the extra cost attached to gaming, for example
you can spend £150 on a used series s
Its the cheapest hobby there is, a console costs 500$ brand new, you can get games on discount all year round. Try cycling, you could easily drop $3k on an entry level bike
Can cost pennies (f2p or cheap indies on entry-level notebook/mobile)
Even mobile gaming requires a decently specced mid tier phone unless you play match 3 games all the time.
Games are on sale all the time and many can offer up to 100 hours a pop.
Imagine being a sports car enthusiast.
Basically anyone can play a video game
my PS5 cost £370
Cheap games or lower specced consoles don't really tell the full story though right?
Doesn't include the peripherals and display, at minimum.

On top of electricity and internet costs, that entry level games cost easily takes you over the cost for a used beginner bike, or a pair of shoes and water bottle for hiking, or the vast majority of board games ever. Basically more than all hobbies typically considered "cheap".

Imagine you moved to a new apartment after losing all your things in a house fire(and somehow losing access to all your digital accounts and past purchases). After working hard for months and saving some money, you decided to relax with a new hobby. Would gaming still be a cheap hobby to you?


Yes, you have a point that it's good time value in terms of enjoyment per cost, but I think people are underselling how much it really costs to get into games.
 

DeceptiveAlarm

Gold Member
It's the cheapest Hobbie I ever had. Even when I got into fly fishing my rod and reel cost more than a PS5 Pro and that was 15yrs ago. Even a gaming pc is cheaper than my motorcycle. Probably equal to my first bike. Then one $60 game lasts 15-100 hours.

I mean I guess bird watching or reading if you join a library is cheaper. Walking is a cheap Hobbie.
 

BlackTron

Member
Gaming is as dirt cheap or expensive as you want it to be. You can still play over 90% of all games ever released with adequate performance on a 1060. At some point you can just keep pouring money in to play the same games on bigger screens at higher resolutions and framerates. To me gaming has gotten like cars -even if you get a Ferrari, there's still a "better" Lambo or Rolls Royce. If you're trapped in the mentality of always needing the latest/best, gaming will utterly destroy you.

Buy games day one for $70 or grind the backlog and wait for the sales. Get a FPGA system or run emulators on a modded Switch.

Or hell just play your SNES that still works.
 

StueyDuck

Member
I don't think the minimum cost point is a good defence of the price. People tend to overlook all the extra cost attached to gaming, for example



Even mobile gaming requires a decently specced mid tier phone unless you play match 3 games all the time.



Cheap games or lower specced consoles don't really tell the full story though right?
Doesn't include the peripherals and display, at minimum.

On top of electricity and internet costs, that entry level games cost easily takes you over the cost for a used beginner bike, or a pair of shoes and water bottle for hiking, or the vast majority of board games ever. Basically more than all hobbies typically considered "cheap".

Imagine you moved to a new apartment after losing all your things in a house fire(and somehow losing access to all your digital accounts and past purchases). After working hard for months and saving some money, you decided to relax with a new hobby. Would gaming still be a cheap hobby to you?


Yes, you have a point that it's good time value in terms of enjoyment per cost, but I think people are underselling how much it really costs to get into games.
I've spent as much on golf clubs as I have on gaming and 18 holes depending where you play can easily be the price of a new game.

Gaming is expensive, but if you compare that to say racing enthusiasts or photography/videography etc. It's relatively cheap.

That's why I say for the barrier of entry being non existent it's an expensive hobby, ol gam gam can pick up a remote and be a gamer same as buying a book to read or picking up sewing or crocheting, but the chance of her being a hobbyist paraglider is far more slim, but the cost of something like the latter dwarfs the cost of gaming.

It's all relative.
 

Knot3D

Member
You forgot the single most crucial metric: TIME.

This is why publisher of GAAS try to maximize time-on-device.
 

Tokio Blues

Gold Member
Console gamers with a TV that cost more than a PC…
Meme Shock GIF by Evan Klar

Ye.. it's not like that bro.

An OLED monitor 34" is expensive, also if you want to play at full settings with 120fps and raytracing you need a good GPU, 4070ti at least. PC gaming is much more expensive, but its better in terms of FPS and Resolution.
 

Mownoc

Member
Doesn't include the peripherals and display, at minimum.

On top of electricity and internet costs, that entry level games cost easily takes you over the cost for a used beginner bike, or a pair of shoes and water bottle for hiking, or the vast majority of board games ever. Basically more than all hobbies typically considered "cheap".

Imagine you moved to a new apartment after losing all your things in a house fire(and somehow losing access to all your digital accounts and past purchases). After working hard for months and saving some money, you decided to relax with a new hobby. Would gaming still be a cheap hobby to you?


Yes, you have a point that it's good time value in terms of enjoyment per cost, but I think people are underselling how much it really costs to get into games.
A used 1080p monitor can be had for less than £40 these days. But still if you don't think a £150 used series s is a low enough cost then you can grab a used xbox one for £50... or an emulation handheld for like £30 from aliexpress and play PS1/GBA/Snes titles. Video games can be a hobby for someone in basically any price bracket.

Whether you've got £35 or £3,500 to spend you can enjoy video games.

Gaming can only be considered an expensive hobby if you put a condition on it that you have to have modern powerful hardware or brand new games.
 
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Radioskugga

Member
It's cheap comparing to other hobbies like cars or if you're into horse riding.
But it's expensive comparing to knitting yarn.

Where is the line drawn between hobby and lifestyle?
 

clarky

Gold Member
It can be as cheap or as soul crushingly expensive as you like.

Just get a Series S and gamepass if you're a cheap bastard.

Personally i spend what i would describe as a small fortune, but i love gaming above all other forms of entertainment.
 
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DinoD

Member
I've been into record collecting/audiophila for many years. My current rig (speakers, digital front end, 2 turntables, amplifier etc) is around 60K worth. I don't even know the value of my record colleciton. That's like lower mid -mid tear in audiophile world. So. To me. Gaming is very cheap, great value for money hobby.
 
It's comparatively cheap. It's expensive if you want all the new and fancy stuff but if all you want to do is play then there are still plenty of options.
 

Capitan Todd

Neo Member
I'd say it's relatively cheap for me. I'm not into PC gaming though, so I just buy a console every few years. It also helps that I mainly buy physical games and I sometimes resell them after finishing them, so I earn back half of the price or even more. All in all I spend around 100 euro per month on gaming perhaps.
 

EverydayBeast

ChatGPT 0.1
Collectors have their hands in the dirt searching for golden hits, pc gamers have building abilities, certain rules they follow, and look at console gamers who click so well with mainstream, if you want a subscription you can.
 

Felessan

Member
Even mobile gaming requires a decently specced mid tier phone unless you play match 3 games all the time.
300 euro phone can get you through for several years. Or you can put bluestacks on the study note that you already have.
I know some people who are avid gamers but due to circumstances have to do it at minimal cost. There are quite some sacrifices, but it's doable.
 

Radical_3d

Member
Dont forget that dhoby atmos soundbar
Totally worth it. I don’t want to have a spread of speakers in my living room and I don’t want to have more packaging work when moving. Great sound and crisp clear dialogues. No neighbour complained. Great success.
 

Astray

Member
Gaming is a hobby that was considered cheap at one point, but it's getting more and more expensive due to various factors.
 

Wildebeest

Member
Some hobbies have a high entry point, but others have a limitless cap. Like if you are a billionaire you can spend a huge amount of money on an art collection, but what are you going to do with a collection of 5000 Jet Skis?
 

Akuji

Member
if it wasnt near the cheapest hobbies there are, there wouldnt be as many people doing it. its insanely cheap.
If you want you can go from nothing to a perfectly fine setup for 300€ on the 2nd hand market.
150€ for a ps4 with controller, 100€ for a tv/monitor. 50€ for games.

With those 300 you can already play easily for 300 hours. Every hour of content u wanna add, is even cheaper.
There is next to no other hobby that offers variety like gaming while being able to offer content for 1000 hours or more a year, with a pricepoint below 1€ / hour.
Sure price of electricity wasnt in my calculation. But you can get the PS4 a bit cheaper, you can get even new 1080p panels for under 100€, so used ... you get already pretty good stuff compared to what was around 2013 when the console launched.
so even if the electricity needs to be in the budget, no problem.

There are cheaper hobbies to enter, but if you wanna go ultra low end, buy a Nintendo DS used for like 50 bucks and a few games. Can already give you something to do for very little and then ... its very ... difficult for pretty much anything to keep up in price.

If you want to, you can do it more expensive, sure. You can kit out ur gaming rig and build a gaming room for 100.000€ but then, surely but slowly, you get to the limit of what actually is "gaming" which is still cheap for a hobby to bling out completly.
 

RagnarokIV

Battlebus imprisoning me \m/ >.< \m/
All relative really.

A $30 monthly gym sub is cheap. And that's a cheap hobby. Or you can get on the gear and extra curricular to 'enhance' your hobby and end up $$$

A PS5/Xbox and a TV is cheap. Or you can enhance that hobby too with OLED and a beast PC $$$

NeoGAF is a cheap hobby, unless you're John Marston or OverHeat enhancing/spunking $$$ on GOLD lol.
 

Skifi28

Member
You can make it expensive if you want, but the baseline its rather cheap. Something like an old PC or a second hand PS4 are enough to play thousands of games.
 

Gp1

Member
Pay 1000 usd on a cheap PC on credit card. Emulate "every" game know to man until the 2010 + a bunch o new games, f2p etc. and it will last you years.

You can spend that in a week or less if you are into partying/drinking.

It's in the cheap range
 

Roberts

Member
Well, I have a few hobbies but only three of them cost real money: cooking, gaming and movies. Gaming is relatively cheap and nothing compared to a fortune I've sunk into all kinds of home movie formats, original posters, props over the last 30 years.
 
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Radical_3d

Member
Having a great TV and displaying shit IQ image on it…
PC gaming. Displaying ultra HD gigapixels at 400fps in a TFT matte display with the colours of an old 60’s Polaroid and smearing their ghosting effect like a horny slug since 1.999!!
 
It can be cheap depending on your choices, but it's also a hobby that you constantly have to invest money into. Over the coarse of time that's gonna add up to a lot of money spent.

If you buy a nice flute or trumpet for example, you can play it for the rest of your life. The upfront investment might be somewhat high, but there's (potentially) no recurring costs after. You're not even using electricity to power it. That's quite the difference.
 

hemo memo

You can't die before your death
The cost of gaming can vary depending on several factors. Keeping up with the latest releases and keeping up with the newest gaming trends can be very expensive. However, there are ways to make gaming more affordable. By being patient and waiting for discounts, which occur more frequently now than ever before, you can save a significant amount of money on games. Additionally, playing on a PC offers a wider range of stores and third-party key sellers, which can further reduce the cost of gaming.
 

Hustler

Member
It's all relative and how smart you are about it. The hardware costs can be spread out over the years. If you are a console gamer, that cost can be spread out over 6-7 years. If you are a PC gamer who likes to get the latest graphics card every 1-2 years.... yikes. If you build a PC and only do a new build ever 7 years like me, then cost effective.

If you buy only new games on Day 1 all time, expensive af. If you buy games on sale all the time and Day 1 every now and then, then it's not expensive at all. Or if you only buy a few games a year and they are MP games like FIFA or COD and play that all year round... very cheap.

All depends on how you approach the hobby.
 

Rippa

Member
It’s my least expensive hobby for sure. Especially because I primarily play on console and mostly only buy pre owned physical game discs.
 

Banjo64

cumsessed
You can get old used hardware and games dirt cheap. Or buy a new console and only play F2P. Gaming's as expensive as you want it to be.
Not to mention mobile is cheap as crap.

Vampire Survivors is completely free on mobile. Games like Minecraft are £4.99.
 
I've spent as much on golf clubs as I have on gaming and 18 holes depending where you play can easily be the price of a new game.

Gaming is expensive, but if you compare that to say racing enthusiasts or photography/videography etc. It's relatively cheap.

That's why I say for the barrier of entry being non existent it's an expensive hobby, ol gam gam can pick up a remote and be a gamer same as buying a book to read or picking up sewing or crocheting, but the chance of her being a hobbyist paraglider is far more slim, but the cost of something like the latter dwarfs the cost of gaming.

It's all relative.
300 euro phone can get you through for several years. Or you can put bluestacks on the study note that you already have.
I know some people who are avid gamers but due to circumstances have to do it at minimal cost. There are quite some sacrifices, but it's doable.
True. The variable cost to entry is a unique selling point.
 

JayK47

Member
I make it cheap. New computer every 10 or more years. Games on sale or free. Only buy a console if it has gone down in price.
 

AmuroChan

Member
It's all relative. It's cheaper than say art collecting or aviation which 99.9% of the world wouldn't be able to afford, but it's more expensive than something like jogging or hiking.
 

mdkirby

Gold Member
It's as expensive or as cheap as you want it to be. IF you want it to be cheap, it has literally NEVER been cheaper to play absolutely mountains of games (outside of the era of piracy/pirate bay etc anyhow). Buy a second hand series S, and Gamespass, or a ps4 with ps+, then just play what's on the services, its crazy good value. Or if you want use amazon or epic and just grab the free games every month. OR buy the latest kit, and buy the latest games at release if you don't really care about how much stuff costs.
 
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