Well in general a new game is around $50. And  buying 10 of them does not seem that unlikely to me.
		
		
	 
Over the lifetime, no. I don't believe anyone would buy 10 games up  front though, unless they were in a Steam sale or something and then  you'd be paying significantly less than $500. There's plenty of good  free games available for the PC though, so you don't actually have to  buy any games at all.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			$120 is a lot of  money for teenagers and kids. Nice paying jobs usually require a good  education and effort on your side so they don't come for free  either.
		
		
	 
Which just proves my point. A lot of gamers are poor.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			Assuming your not a teenager or homeless, how  much do you pay for rent? How much for your car, insurance? How much do  you spent on beer per month?You can keep your $120 card for 2 years  easily. thats $6 per month. So skip one beer per week and you got  it.
		
		
	 
Well, no you don't, as money doesn't just appear  because you decide to save up for 2 years. You have to wait until you've  finishing saving that money before you can actually spend it. And in  these times, a lot of people are struggling to make ends meet.
Come  Christmas, there's going to be kids around the world asking their  parents for gaming systems. The new consoles have have come out just in  time, as have Kaveri APUs and Haswell will be available. Based on the  launch prices of previous APUs, the top Kaveri part will cost around  $150 at launch. An SFF system, top Kaveri, 8 GB RAM, 1 TB HD will cost  around $400-$450. Kaveri will have upto 4 Steamroller cores and 8 GCN  compute units. The HD7750 has 8 GCN compute units. The PS3 is rumoured  to have HD7750 level graphics and 8 Jaguar cores.
The PS4 isn't  going to launch for anything less than $400 for the top tier, but it'll  cost less than a good gaming rig. That makes the Kaveri system an  excellent bargain and cheaper upfront and over time due to free and  cheaper games. With the Trinity and Llano APUs, the price difference  between the best and the worst is about $100. An SFF PC based on the  weakest Kaveri will be significantly cheaper than other gaming systems.
To  a struggling parent with a kid wanting a gaming system, that PC is an  excellent bargain. It can also be upgraded the following Christmas to  the top Kaveri apart for around $100-150, or maybe even an Excavator  based APU, making it an even better bargain.
As it stands at the  moment though, someone with a $350 budget would probably be better off  purchasing an A4-5300 SFF PC than a top tier console. I can't say for  certain though as I haven't seen the data. What I can say though, is  that it will be a hell of a lot cheaper to upgrade the Trinity based PC  to a Kaveri based PC, compared to upgrading a PS3 to a PS4.
An A4-5300 based system offers an excellent starting point for those wanting a cheap gaming system and offers a very cheap and powerful upgrade path. The combined cost of a A4-5300 based system and an upgrade to the top Kaveri part at its release will cost around the same price as the next gen consoles.
So, I hope you now see why getting data on these low end APUs is worthwhile.