The results are in, and they confirm what most of us already suspected: when people pick up a device to play games, more often than not it’s the one already in their pocket. In our latest weekly poll asking readers which device they use for gaming, the smartphone took a commanding lead. On a phone-focused site, that outcome was never really in doubt.
What did raise an eyebrow was the battle for second place. We figured it would come down to a slugfest between PC and console — the two platforms traditionally associated with serious gaming. Instead, tablets quietly slipped into the runner-up spot.
That’s a genuine surprise. Plenty of people keep an aging slate around purely as a Netflix-and-Facebook machine, and those older models simply don’t have the muscle to run modern titles — least of all the demanding ones with heavy graphics. Yet the poll suggests a sizable chunk of readers are holding tablets powerful enough to handle whatever games they actually play.
It’s a reminder of how far tablet silicon has come. The gap between a flagship phone chip and the chip inside a premium tablet has narrowed to the point where the bigger screen becomes the deciding factor rather than raw performance. For a lot of casual and even mid-core players, a tablet hits the sweet spot: more display real estate than a phone, better battery life under load, and none of the desk-bound commitment of a PC rig.
Speaking of which, the PC landed in a close third. That’s not a collapse by any means — it remains the platform of choice for a dedicated crowd — but it’s telling that mobile-first hardware edged it out among our readership. Whether that reflects the genuine convenience of gaming on the move or simply the makeup of a smartphone-centric audience is open to interpretation. Probably a bit of both.
A few takeaways stand out:
- Smartphones dominate. No shock here, but the margin underlines just how central the phone has become to everyday gaming.
- Tablets are punching above their weight. The form factor is no longer just for streaming and scrolling — people are gaming on them in real numbers.
- PC holds its ground. A close third keeps it firmly in the conversation, even if it didn’t claim the silver medal.
The broader story is that gaming hardware preferences are fragmenting in interesting ways. The lines between casual and serious play, and between mobile and traditional platforms, keep blurring as chips get faster and screens get better across every category. If anything, this poll shows that the device people game on increasingly comes down to what’s convenient rather than what’s most powerful.