Don't know about much more, that was in the past, these days it is a little more, but noway near the amount that would bridge the gap between a 3080 and a next gen console. Sure games will look great on consoles, not sure what that has to do with anything though.1. Console optimisation means developers can get much more performance out of equivalent PC hardware, on consoles. Just look at the graphics on "the last of us part2" - that runs on ancient PS4 hardware, and looks incredible. Imagine how games will look on the next gen consoles, with over 5 times more performance!?!
Does not feel crappy to me, I skipped Turding and got not far of double the performance for less money than a RTX 2080. You can also say I got more performance than a 2080Ti for half the price. Both just work2. 3080 has less VRAM than a console. While some will upgrade their 3080's before it becomes a big deal, it must feel quite crappy to buy a 4k GPU and be close to maxed out on VRAM from day one at 4k.
By the time 10gb becomes an issue I will be rocking a next gen card with no less than 16gb anyway. Feels great
By the way, will be picking up a PS5 in a couple of years once it has a few exclusives and drops in price
3. PS5/Xbox series X will eventually offer more performance than a 3080 will (once developers fully master it) simply due to console optimisation. Though by the time this happens, 4000 series will be out etc.
By then if it ever happens I will be on another graphics card as mentioned
4. People pay £800 extra for 15% performance because they want to. Same for other luxuries in life.
Yes, I know, not sure what that has to do with the point I was making though.
Exactly. So we agree then that 4K will not be mainstream on PC for a some years yet then?5. There are people buying 3080's (a 4k GPU) still running 1080P, or 1440P, when 2070/2080/2080ti cards can murder both resolutions. That's arguably throwing money away as well - paying £650-850 for a lower resolution experience than a console.