Mid 80's PC's were a total joke. So were those overpriced 9" black and white Mac's. blech.
I sold PC's throughout the late 80's<>mid 2000's and if my memory isn't too borked, in '90, the most popular system we had at Wards was a $2k-$3k "multi-media" Packard Bell that had a 286 in it. The 386 machines were a couple grand more. We did have $6k-$8k computers back in '90, so I bet those were 486's, or really high end jam packed 386's? By the early to mid 90's, I know the 486 machines had come down big time. Seems to me, you could get a complete 486 based 'puter for around $1.5-$2k then. Retail that is. I had a good pulse on closeouts, discontinued product, customer returns and that kind of stuff, so I do remember purchasing a 486 DX2 (around '94) w/ CD, sound card, VGA monitor, etc. for about $600-ish. That ended up replacing my Amiga 1200 for more "serious" stuff by the mid 90's - DOH!
But to answer the OP's question... yes, PC owners were being raped HARD during those times. At Wards by the early 90's, we finally did get A500's in to sell. I volunteered to set 'em up, maintained 'em, brought demos, games, etc. to work. I was *the* 'go to' Amiga guy at that store in Niles for a while there and I *did* try in ernest to sell a sub $1k Amiga system vs. a $2k-$3k PeeCee back in the day. Believe me, I did a helluva job trying - and succeeded at times. But people, being of herd mentality sound, mind and body, wouldn't listen. It also sickened me when dolts would return their Amiga, claiming there was no software for it or that it didn't run IBM shit. ARGGHH! You think I didn't make ALL of that very clear during the qualifying/selling process?!? You think I didn't print them out a friggin' homemade Amiga itinerary, listing ALL of the places nearby that sold hardware and software for it?!? Soooooo glad to be out of retail right now! :lol: