Buckle up, Mac chooms, 'cause we’ve got news you’ve been waiting for!
You'll be chippin' into the dark future 52 years early, when the Mac version of Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition drops July 17th, 2025!
Amazing news!View attachment 11418962
Buckle up, Mac chooms, 'cause we’ve got news you’ve been waiting for!
You'll be chippin' into the dark future 52 years early, when the Mac version of Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition drops July 17th, 2025!![]()
I have a Mac, it's been more than 20 years I'm on Mac, and it never have anything to do with production but I might be an exception. I can't wait to see how Cyberpunk will run on it.My understanding of Mac's is that you get one for production related reasons and not necessarily for gaming.
I have a Mac, it's been more than 20 years I'm on Mac, and it never have anything to do with production but I might be an exception. I can't wait to see how Cyberpunk will run on it.
(work great on many compatible games, like BG3 but it's not even comparable^^).
YesI'm assuming you have a console then to play Cyberpunk.
Yes, I got them for my work. I work in the computer music/composition industry, and I often work on very intense workloads that, if done on a PC, would just not be ideal due to how much energy they require. Ever since Apple Silicon came out, it's been a game changer, and I am very satisfied with its performance, especially when testing it against my brother's specced-out Razer Blade. I could do everything on it with better performance and very little battery drain or heat compared to his gaming laptop. Of course, the only problem came with gaming, not because Macs were not capable of gaming—I ran Rocket League on my Mac using Rosetta, which means it was basically having to emulate x86 chips for ARM, and despite it having to translate it on the fly, it ran considerably cooler than my brother's laptop while getting the same performance. I later tested running intense games on Wine like Cyberpunk 2077, and to my surprise, I was getting 45fps on medium settings and high resolution—remember, it is emulation Windows here, so it has to not just translate x86 to ARM but also translate Windows to run on Mac, and yet I got good and stable performance. My fans never got too loud either, which was so surprising since I came from gaming on PCs before this. I ran it only for about an hour or so, but this was proof to me that Macs can game. I deleted it immediately so I could wait for the official release, and now it's finally here. Assassin’s Creed Shadows, Resident Evil, Robocop, and so many more AAA games have already arrived on Mac. So at this point, I don't see why people won't want to buy a Mac for productivity and gaming. That was always my goal with my current Mac, to use it for both, which is why I never purchased a gaming PC or console. I had to wait for about 4 years, but it was worth it.My understanding of Mac's is that you get one for production related reasons and not necessarily for gaming.