Why you should buy a desktop PC in 2022

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Why you should buy a desktop PC in 2022

By Tim Biggs

The avalanche of smartphones, tablets and ultra-light laptops available in the market has led to fewer people buying a desktop PC for their homes, but the move to mobile brings headaches of its own.

Portable devices are very personal, meaning you generally need one for every person in the house, and they all need charging and maintaining. They’re not ergonomic to use for long periods of time. Their ability to move around with you is great, but within the home that means you are never not looking at a screen; a problem that is not limited to children and adolescents.

You don’t necessarily need to go all in on a lighting setup for a desktop pc.

You don’t necessarily need to go all in on a lighting setup for a desktop pc.

A whole house computer

It may sound strange after years of being told that home computers are passé, but there are many good reasons to get a desktop PC for your home. Aside from being able to replace several expensive machines with just one expensive machine, the utility of a full-sized computer has only increased in the last few years.

Storage is cheap, making a PC a handy repository for the whole family’s digital files (and a good alternative to content streaming services if you hook it up to a screen, speakers or your network). You can also plug them directly into your network and leave them on to accomplish a variety of “smart device” tasks, while they use relatively small amounts of power when idle. Desktops are cheaper than similarly powered laptops, and if you haven’t used one for a while you may have forgotten how much smoother and nicer to use they tend to be. No warm knees from an overheating MacBook, or hunching neck pain. No unexpectedly dead batteries or random issues caused by a tangle of underpowered USB dongles.

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Each household member can have their personal profile on the PC, and there are a number of ways you can handle transferring work and files between it and personal devices. The best solution would be to attach some storage to your router (if it supports that) or get a NAS to create your own network drive that anyone on your Wi-Fi can access. If you have kids that might be tempted to hide away with their devices, having a central PC in a communal area can be a good way to make things a bit more open and collaborative, and make screen time easier to manage. It also means you can set up just one high-quality and ergonomic station instead of worrying about each person’s specific gear.

With a monitor and other accessories attached, a desktop PC can become an efficient station for work, school, media and creative projects. Plus...

Yes, video games, obviously

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The clearest advantage of a desktop PC’s extra power and stability, unless you’re doing high-end graphics or video work, is in gaming. But a few things have changed in recent years that makes this fact relevant for a lot more people. Games are transitioning from a retail model to a Netflix-style subscription model, which is great for people who want an instant and vast library of games, and a PC offers the most choice.

Steam is still king for buying and owning games, but Game Pass gives you access to a huge library for $11 a month.

Steam is still king for buying and owning games, but Game Pass gives you access to a huge library for $11 a month.

PC Game Pass has all of Microsoft’s own games and a hundred more, EA and Ubisoft offer all their games on subscriptions, and even charity-focused Humble Bundle (which lets you pay what you want, and keep the games) has a subscription tier.

A powerful PC can cost more than twice what you’d pay for the latest game console — the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X are each $750 — but between sales and subscriptions you can save a lot on games. Plus a PC is also your general computing or work machine, and both Xbox and PlayStation games are now being published on PC, so it’s essentially one machine to play most of your games.

The other thing to consider is virtual reality. VR has had a massive spike in popularity recently, primarily owing to new headsets like Meta’s Quest 2 that don’t need to be connected to a PC or external gear. But all those new VR fans are likely to find that the most impressive and complex (and most numerous) collection of VR experiences is on computers.

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Fortunately, the Quest 2 pairs well with a PC. As long as you have a decently fast router, and your PC is plugged into your network with a cable rather than Wi-Fi, you can beam the latest VR experiences wirelessly from your computer straight to your eyeballs. This will only get more handy as social and work-based VR applications become more common.

It’s easier than you think

All-in-one PCs like Apple’s iMacs, and compact off-the-shelf units made with bespoke parts, have their place. But to get the full utility of a desktop PC you’ll want one put together from modular, easy-to-replace parts. Not only is this the most cost-efficient and most flexible route, it means cheaper and easier repairs plus the ability to upgrade parts as you go instead of throwing out your old machine and buying a whole new one every four years.

Physically building a desktop PC yourself is not difficult these days — you may not even need a screwdriver — but planning and sourcing compatible components is the tricky part. However, there are many shops and websites that will build a PC to your specifications, which gives you the benefits of a desktop without the hassle, and usually comes with a warranty. Recently, I tried a PC from NZXT, a global PC builder with a shop in Melbourne, and while it does take custom orders the main selling point is its preset models. Especially for those looking to get into PC gaming, a standardised build lets you see exactly how your machine will perform before you buy it.

NZXT’s “Starter Pro” PC.

NZXT’s “Starter Pro” PC.

For example, the machine I tried was NZXT’s “Starter Pro” configuration, which the company said would achieve 110 frames per second in Grand Theft Auto V at Full HD, and if anything it performed slightly better. I also surmised from its list of estimates that most new games would run well at mid to high settings, and indeed they did. Halo Infinite for example had no problem at 1440p and 60 frames per second on its high graphics preset.

At $2600 this PC would only make sense if you really were replacing game consoles, a workstation and mobile machines with it, but I was impressed by how close the price was to the sum of the individual parts. The graphics card, a GeForce RTX 3060, could cost you almost $1000 on its own, plus there’s a 1TB NVME SSD for storage.

You could also opt to have a tower PC built with no discrete graphics card, relying on the integrated graphics in your chosen processor which will be fine for work and good for light gaming, and cut out a lot of the upfront expense. You can always add a card later.

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