"Okay" is actually a good way to put it. I don't play it on PC, so I don't have a good frame of reference to compare, but it works fairly well. Unfortunately, it suffers from the highly restrictive nature of the console software release model. It's easy to put out independent updates and patches on PC, as there is no third party "partner" like Microsoft or Sony to go through for deployment approval on their platform. As a result, at this exact point for example, we are going to have to wait until January 12, 2021 to get the newest "House Shattered" episode with the new perks and bonuses associated with it, whereas it's already available for those on the PC.
Worse, if any untested bugs or other code glitches appear, they have to wait for MS/Sony's approval to deploy hotfixes or patches to clear up the problem. Last month, a large update broke all the shard servers and nobody could get in for several days. It was quite the dumpster fire. I don't recall PC users experiencing the problem, only console players. If PC users did see it, it was fixed much quicker than ours, for the same reasons.
When it's running, it runs fine. Some rubber-banding on several maps where multiplayer activities are available (galaxy map, Nimbus III, battlezones, etc.), but for the most part it's ... okay. If you can live with it, and live with the 2-3 month lag-time between major episodic updates, you'll be fine. If you need the latest and greatest yesterday, then get a new PC, amp it up with 32GB RAM minimum, 2 TB storage and a video accelerator card that requires a liquid nitrogen tank, dims your house lights and makes an Alienware look like an abacus.

When it's running, it runs fine. Some rubber-banding on several maps where multiplayer activities are available (galaxy map, Nimbus III, battlezones, etc.), but for the most part it's ... okay. If you can live with it, and live with the 2-3 month lag-time between major episodic updates, you'll be fine. If you need the latest and greatest yesterday, then get a new PC, amp it up with 32GB RAM minimum, 2 TB storage and a video accelerator card that requires a liquid nitrogen tank, dims your house lights and makes an Alienware look like an abacus.
