Apex Legends Would Be Better on Console, If It Wasn’t for the Toxic Playerbase

At this point, I’m a battle royale game veteran. Your PUBGs and your Fortnites have all known my skill and wrath, and I keep sampling or going down the rabbit hole with the ever-expanding tumultuous genre in which some number of teams enter and one single one leaves. And, for the most part, I’ve acquired those hundreds of hours of experience on the PC platform. But the sudden onset of Apex Legends, the battle royale game that currently sits on top of the pile, has got me rethinking my platform of preference. The simple fact is that Apex Legends is a better experience on my ol’ PS4. In my experience, it’s also more toxic by orders of magnitude. Now I’m in a position where I don’t want to play the better version of a game because I just don’t want to deal with the playerbase.
For me, it seems obvious that the console version of Apex Legends is preferable to the PC version, and it all comes down to balance. I’ve whiled away a couple afternoons being a top-tier legend with a mouse and keyboard, and every time I have walked away wondering about why certain things in the game work the way they do. Armor is extremely powerful, and you really have to keep hitting targets for a long time to make sure that you get a down. Coming from other PC shooters, especially the Battlefield games and PUBG, that extended fight time just felt weird.
When I started playing on console, it all clicked into place. Bullet damage and armor values in Apex Legends are made for slightly longer fights with slightly worse aim, allowing for some grazing shots and some fumbling reloads that make for more engaging combat encounters through the medium of the controller. The movement, the firing distance, the lead times that you need for shot speed: all of this makes the most sense to me when I’m doing it on my trusty PlayStation.
At the same time, I am also having some of the worst play experiences of my entire life in the console version of the game. I’m no stranger to console shooters, and I’ve put lots of time into Call of Duty IIII and the last couple Battlefield games over the past few years. The public culture of online shooter games is, to be frank, chock full of some of the worst behavior you can find in videogames right now. But none of my public chat and party chat experiences in those games have matched the few dozen games of Apex Legends I’ve played in the past few weeks.