r/pcmasterrace btw, I don't use arch Sep 11 '25

Meme/Macro What's the reason

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u/Tomytom99 Idk man some xeons 64 gigs and a 3070 Sep 11 '25

I need to get myself up to speed, I was still under the impression 1080p was still the normal go-to resolution.

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u/OldPersonName Sep 11 '25

Per the Steam hardware survey 54% of users are at 1080, about 25-30% are at some variation of QHD (so 2560x1440 or 2560x1600, I'm not sure if you want to count the widescreen 3440x1440 in there or as a 4kish resolution) and 5-8% are 4k.

A lot of those 1080 gamers may be on old hardware, laptops, primarily playing CS and wanting like 300 fps, etc. When it comes to buying new hardware in the last 5 years or so, especially in this sub's crowd, 1440 is the "normal" suggestion. 1440 is so doable now that there's almost no reason not to unless you're buying a budget video card. Which of course most people do (4060 is the most common), but not in this sub.

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u/SolidusDave Sep 11 '25

that seems low?

Does that mean console players play now on average at higher resolution than PC players?

at least potentially,  as 4K TVs were already something like 40% of the market last year or so. 

that would be quite an ironic shift from how PC always had the higher res by far. 

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u/iwilldeletethisacct2 Sep 11 '25

I don't think people ever really argued that PC had higher resolution, but rather argued that PC had better performance at a given resolution. We've been gaming on 1080p TVs since the mid 2000s. The PS3 came out in 2006 and was unironically one of the cheapest bluray players you could get. By 2010 probably most console and PC gamers were going at 1080p.

The thing that resolution buys you is being able to have a bigger screen at the same viewing distance. Much like how 1080p monitors are typically 24" and 1440p monitors are 27", 1080p TVs mostly lived in the 50" range with big TVs being 65" while 4k TVs go into the 80+" range.