Skip to main content
Tech Radar Tech Radar Pro Tech Radar Gaming
TechRadar TechRadar the business technology experts
SG EditionSingapore
DK EditionDanmark FI EditionSuomi NO EditionNorge SE EditionSverige UK EditionUK IT EditionItalia NL EditionNederland BE (NL) EditionBelgië (Nederlands) FR EditionFrance DE EditionDeutschland ES EditionEspaña
US EditionUS (English) CA EditionCanada MX EditionMéxico
AU EditionAustralia NZ EditionNew Zealand
RSS
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
Don't miss these
The best gaming desk against a colored backdrop.
Gaming The best gaming desks in 2025: my picks for expanding and optimizing your setup
PS5 Monitor Buying Guide
PS5 The best monitors for PS5 and PS5 Pro 2025: our top picks to make your PlayStation 5 games shine
Dell XPS 17 (2022), one of the best 17-inch laptops, on a blue background.
Gaming Laptops The best 17-inch laptop 2025
A Razer Huntsman V2 Analog, the best gaming keyboard, against a techradar background
Computer Gaming Accessories The best gaming keyboard 2025
A LogiTech MX Master S3, the best mouse, against a techradar background
Computer Gaming Accessories The best mouse 2025
Two of the best Dell laptops set against a blue techradar background
Laptops The best Dell laptop 2025
A Dell Tower Plus on a desk
Desktop PCs The best desktop PC in 2025
Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro against a green TechRadar background
Computer Gaming Accessories The best gaming mouse 2025
The best gaming consoles on a blue background.
Consoles & PC Best gaming console in 2025: every major system tested and ranked
Trycoo Mini PC
Pro Early Black Friday bargain alert - this $199 mini PC features the fastest AMD chip in its class, delivering twice the speed of Intel’s rival CPU, and it comes with Windows 11 Pro
A Microsoft Surface laptop, HP laptop and Asus laptop on a green background
Laptops The best laptop deals in October 2025
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (M4) with screen open on blue background
Laptops The best laptops 2025 tested, reviewed and rated
espresso 15
Monitors Best portable monitor of 2025
NZXT Player PC against a green TechRadar background
Gaming PCs The best budget gaming PC 2025
Alienware Aurora Gaming Desktop against a cyan TechRadar background
Gaming PCs The best gaming PC 2025
Trending
  • Best office chairs
  • Best web hosting
  • Best website builder
  • Best antivirus
  • Expert Insights
  1. Pro

5 good reasons why your next machine must be a PC

News
By Jamie Hinks published 28 April 2015

PCs are more relevant than ever

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Introduction

Introduction

If you believe everything you read coming out of the various analyst houses around the world the PC is on its last legs, or more to the point, the PC is actually well and truly dead since Apple used the iPad and Mac to hammer nails into its already outdated coffin.

Midway through 2013 the story was this: tablet sales were on pace to race past PC sales in just two years after selling 332 million units and thus eclipsing the pitiful 323 million computers sold. That was all before the PC began its fight back into the relevance of everyone's lives.

2-in-1 laptops plus a new breed of consumer looking to get a far better experience than the limited one offered by certain tablets mean that sales are as buoyant as ever. Chuck in the introduction of Windows 10 this July and the release of stellar new games like Grand Theft Auto V and there's more than enough to get excited about. What follows is a look at the five major reasons why the PC is still relevant for each and every one of us.

  • In partnership with Microsoft, powered by the HP Spectre 360
Page 1 of 6
Page 1 of 6
Gaming is better on a PC

Gaming is better on a PC

Here's something that will shock you: PC gaming is better than your PlayStation 4 and Xbox One combined. Why? The games of course. Not to mention the far better graphics on offer. This is why the hype surrounding Grand Theft Auto V on the PC outstripped that of the current gen consoles, and there are plenty of other reasons to choose a PC over a PS4 or Xbox One.

Console owners are constantly bemoaning the fact that they go out, buy the game, and get it home only to find that they have to be connected to the PlayStation Network or Xbox Live to play it. That's before the subsequent weighty update then has to be download – yes, we've kissed goodbye to the days of playing a game right out of the box. With a PC you're usually downloading the game straight from the internet and there's no fussy branded network getting in the way of your fun.

Upgrading, which we'll come onto later, is of course another way to keep your machine on its toes, and games that need better graphics will never be out of reach of your PC. That level of control over what you're seeing on-screen is something that Mac users and console owners simply can't compete with, and it means gaming on a PC is a far better experience all round.

All this is before you even consider the experience offered by Steam on PCs and with all that to think about it's little wonder PC gaming rigs are being talked up like never before.

Page 2 of 6
Page 2 of 6
2-in-1 laptops are where it's at

2-in-1 laptops are where it's at

They're not strictly the "PCs" that we're usually talking about, but 2-in-1 laptops creep close enough back towards fully-fledged machines for them to be completely relevant to the recovery of the PC market as a whole. Microsoft's choice to harmonise the user experience across all devices through the release of Windows 10 means that 2-in-1 laptops will be even more PC-like than ever, and it's perfectly plausible that the power being injected into the machines will get to far weightier levels.

Intel is doing its bit by continuing to push the boundaries with chip families such as Haswell and Broadwell that consume tiny amounts of energy whilst offering the kind of power that the new breed of smaller machines need.

On the manufacturer side of things there are 2-in-1 laptops to fit every scenario such as the Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga that targets the business users of its ThinkPad range, and the Microsoft Surface Pro 3 that blazes a trail for users who want a full laptop experience in a thinner device. As time goes on the popularity of these devices will do a lot to shape the PC market, and the fact they still incorporate many elements of the PC goes to show how relevant PCs still are.

Page 3 of 6
Page 3 of 6
Upgrades mean PCs stay relevant

Upgrades mean PCs stay relevant

Millions of console gamers across the world have stacks and stacks of DVD sized boxes plus the brick-like consoles themselves filling up their closets, and you can bet your bottom dollar none of them even considered buying a PC when the PS4 and Xbox One were on the table. Buying a PC would have meant no disposing of old consoles and games thanks to the golden chance to upgrade any components that go out of date.

That said, when it comes to upgrading some people are worried that they might end up breaking the whole machine by delving deep inside the case, yet there are now plenty of companies creating external solutions to this. Alienware, Dell's gaming arm, is set to bring a graphics amplifier to its range for the first time in its upcoming Alienware 17 gaming-laptop-stroke-desktop. What this does is allow any user to easily add GPU performance at any time, and gone are the days when games simply wouldn't run due to a lack of graphical power.

While we're talking about possible upgrades it's only right to mention the replacement monitors that will let your tower PC live on for many moons. The increased GPU performance that comes over time will need a shiny new monitor to make the best of it, and this is something that's a pipe dream for laptop, MacBook and iMac owners.

It opens you up to a future where 4K and 5K are anything but a pipe dream and even though the prices are exorbitantly high right now, just wait it out. You might even be able to bag yourself one of those bendy screens that LG and Samsung are so keen on.

Page 4 of 6
Page 4 of 6
Microsoft is about to revolutionise Windows

Microsoft is about to revolutionise Windows

Even though the PC market is still recovering, all it is really doing is turning double digit percentage point losses to those in the single figures. This will all change once Microsoft finally takes its next evolutionary step this July with Windows 10.

Windows 10 will be a truly cross-platform experience and offer users of smartphones, tablets, wearables, "things" and the Xbox a chance to use a powerful OS built from the ground up. PC owners should be more excited than all of the above though, and the centre of the home will very much be the PC.

Microsoft hasn't always offered the most intuitive experience for those using its OS, and Redmond has done its homework with Windows 10 to make sure that the touchscreens adorning many new PCs are more than catered for. Those who still use a keyboard haven't been forgotten about either, and the Start menu's central place at the heart of the OS is a joy to behold.

Windows 10 is more than that though. It will offer constant updates to its user base to make sure that any errors are quickly dealt with. All this from an OS that will be completely free for at least one year and maybe even longer than that if users take to the system in their droves.

So the expected success of Windows 10 makes PCs even more relevant than ever, and if anything can drive PCs on to even loftier heights, the introduction and performance of Windows 10 has a big chance of proving to be a vital factor.

Page 5 of 6
Page 5 of 6
There's more choice than ever

There's more choice than ever

If there's one thing that this article shows it is the sheer choice out there for anyone looking for a PC, and this, over and above anything else, makes the PC extremely relevant now as well as in the future. With a PC there's no way you're limited by the lack of choice offered by Apple's MacBook Air, Pro and iMac. The best part is that PC manufacturers are constantly pushing the boundaries to try and gain an advantage. And that's very good news indeed for consumers.

A few years ago no one had even heard of such a thing as a Chromebook, yet now it is beginning to quietly revolutionise not only the classroom but even the workplace by offering easy access to Google's plethora of trusty services. Another class that was otherwise absent up until recently was those 2-in-1 laptops that we mentioned earlier. Even though some will say they're technically tablets, they still have a huge part to play in the PC market.

At the other end of the market there's the super-fast and ridiculously thin Ultrabooks that bring power by the bucket load and can easily replace even the most powerful of tower PCs or all-in-ones, which are another two categories on their own. On top of the whole lot sits the behemoths of the gaming PC sector that offer unparalleled graphics and processing power to eager gamers the world over.

It's this kind of choice that continues to make the PC market as relevant as it has ever been, and you never know – those analysts could well begin to believe the hype before long.

Page 6 of 6
Page 6 of 6
TOPICS
Windows 10 Microsoft
Jamie Hinks
Read more
A Dell Tower Plus on a desk
The best desktop PC in 2025
 
 
Alienware Aurora Gaming Desktop against a cyan TechRadar background
The best gaming PC 2025
 
 
6 things to know before getting into PC gaming
 
 
The Asus ROG NUC on a red background with a TechRadar deals tag reading 'DON'T MISS'.
Xbox is dead – here's why I want to buy this compact gaming PC on Black Friday instead
 
 
The best productivity tips for your PC
Mac or PC: what is the best platform for your small business
 
 
NZXT Player PC against a green TechRadar background
The best budget gaming PC 2025
 
 
Latest in Pro
VMware
VMware confirms its spec guidance on storage servers was rather inaccurate
 
 
man using voip headset talking to customer
AI voice fraud is exploiting contact centers
 
 
In this photo illustration, the Cloudflare logo is seen displayed on a smartphone screen.
Cloudflare outlines what caused major outage - but says a hack wasn't to blame
 
 
An image of network security icons for a network encircling a digital blue earth.
GPT-5 is here and your network needs to catch up
 
 
A person holding out their hand with a digital AI symbol.
What exactly am I paying for? Redefining value in the age of AI
 
 
Cloudways home page in 2025
Looking for powerful Web Hosting software? Cloudways could be your answer this Black Friday
 
 
Latest in News
iPhone 14 Pro with improved iOS 17 keyboard autocorrect
iOS 26’s keyboard is still broken – autocorrect is driving iPhones mad
 
 
NordVPN on a mobile phone
NordVPN takes on phone scammers with new call protection feature for the UK and Canada
 
 
Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra Review
Brace yourself: Xiaomi warns of a ‘sizeable rise’ in smartphone prices next year
 
 
A collage of a demasked Spider-Man, Captain Marvel staring into the camera, and Daredevil shouting
New Avengers: Doomsday leak seemingly confirms two more heroes for the Marvel movie
 
 
Zenless Zone Zero.
The next Zenless Zone Zero update adds a chakram-wielding panda girl
 
 
Gemini 3 thumb Wars
I tested Gemini 3, ChatGPT 5.1, and Claude Sonnet 4.5 – and Gemini crushed it in a real coding task
 
 
LATEST ARTICLES
  1. 1
    iOS 26’s keyboard is still broken – autocorrect is driving iPhones mad
  2. 2
    NordVPN takes on phone scammers with new call protection feature for the UK and Canada
  3. 3
    New Avengers: Doomsday leak seemingly confirms two more heroes for the Marvel movie
  4. 4
    Kirby Air Riders review: this Switch 2 racer feels like Smash on wheels
  5. 5
    10 easy tips to help you get better results from ChatGPT every time

TechRadar is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Add as a preferred source on Google
  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Web notifications
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...