It seems strange to me that every 7th generation console has much less memory than contemporary PCs, but games on consoles still run pretty smooth today.
For example:
PS3 has 256 MB memory for system and 256 MB memory for video.
Xbox 360 has 512 MB of GDDR3 RAM clocked at 700 MHz.
And, this is really strange, Wii has only 24 MB of video RAM and 64 MB GDDR3 system RAM.
But if you try to run GTA 4 on the PC with 256 MB of system RAM, even with 256 MB RAM on the video card, well, let's just say it won't work that way.
Why?
Answer
Let's do some comparisons...
PS3 has 256 MB memory for system and 256 MB memory for video. Xbox 360 has 512 MB of GDDR3 RAM clocked at 700 MHz. And, this is really strange, Wii has only 24 MB of video RAM and 64 MB GDDR3 system RAM.
Graphics on Wii games are usually kept simple, you won't see shiny graphics there apart from the nice intro to Mario & Sonic's introduction screen. Although that's just a video playing back, cheap...
If you don't believe me, this comparison shows it clearly.
— A Visual Comparison Of Modern Warfare's Wii Debut And The Original
It doesn't seem easy to find other clear comparisons, the image search results are overloaded with results of the same game, the Wii U or pictures too small to tell the difference; you're always welcome to add another picture, but the Wii game console has yet to surprise me.
For the PS 3 vs XBOX 360, you clearly see a difference in texture.
— Developers Speaking Out on the PS3
As for XBOX 360 vs PC, the difference lies in the resolution, textures and more...
— Risen releases February on 360, will be proper port
Is it all about the memory?
No, certainly not. How fast the GPU can perform in terms of fill rate and shading also plays a huge role; this is why the XBOX 360 outperforms the PS 3, as they have the same amount of memory.
All those factors involved in the specifications contribute to being able to do effects like bloom, drawing things further in the distance, do better bump mapping and lightning, having even better AA and more...
Sometimes this takes a second look at the photo to actually see the difference, most often you can't always tell this due to compression of the picture (or YouTube video) such that it doesn't represent the actual graphics in the game.
Similarly, you can get a PC with a ton of memory, but have a card that can't even play a game at 720p.
It's about how much you can put into it for the price.
Let's say price wouldn't matter, well, we'd have something like the Fastra II.
That's right, we're looking at six NVIDIA GTX295 dual-GPU cards, and one GTX275 single-GPU card. That's 13 GPUs total! That's why it outperforms a typical GPU 12 times.
Although, well, yeah; this set-up requires some software / driver optimization to suffice for gaming.
To address the question... Do PCs need much more RAM?
Not necessarily, one could build a machine with a light-weight Linux kernel, light-weight X and perhaps wine as well (unless the game has native support); as a result you'll end up with barely any space taken by the Linux kernel and most space available to the game, then, you get the hardware with the same memory limits as the console, turn down the game graphics and actually have PS3 / XBOX 360 like graphics. I have no clue whether the Wii specs could be achieved, but most games on the Wii aren't available for computer architectures anyway (ignoring emulation).
The PC itself doesn't impose more memory, it's what the environment your game runs in does.
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