Too Xtreme for me :lol:Hahaha I kind of like it,kind of...
Too Xtreme for me :lol:Hahaha I kind of like it,kind of...
Well they have said that to run TW3 at ultra settings, you need some serious hardware. My GPU budget for next spring is gonna be something like 600-700€ and I want the fastest possible single GPU card that you can have with that money.
I have an off kind question. I planning to buy a new GPU, my choice is the: Gigabyte nVidia GTX760 OC VGA (PCIe 3.0, 4 GB GDDR5, 256 bit) and I have a 600 or 650W Cooler Master power supply. My question is that the power supply can handle this GPU or I need better one?
Thank you.
I have an off kind question. I planning to buy a new GPU, my choice is the: Gigabyte nVidia GTX760 OC VGA (PCIe 3.0, 4 GB GDDR5, 256 bit) and I have a 600 or 650W Cooler Master power supply. My question is that the power supply can handle this GPU or I need better one?
Thank you.
Say one question to anyone who has experience in this area. Overclocking, I was going to buy a K series i5 to dabble in this mystical art but I guess I'm having newbie jitters (google and it's horror stories) and thinking of changing my part list to a regular 4690 i5. Is overclocking worth it if all you want to do with your rig is play games for the next few years? It seems to be an enthusiast hobby and I could save some money getting the locked core as well, and don't risk blowing everything up with the voltage.
Depends. To me, overclocking is more a way to get more out of inexpensive or outdated components than to put expensive hardware at risk. I'll shamelessly overclock old Core 2 Quads and Phenom IIs. I'm getting one of the new overclock-friendly Haswells, but it's a cheap 2-core Pentium G3258 that's going in an application that needs maximum single-threaded performance, where it will save me hundreds over an overkill Core i7.
You can get one of the new Haswells (their overclocking ability has been improved tremendously) and a Z97-chipset motherboard, then not overclock it until you find you need to push the CPU faster. When you do overclock, do not go beyond your comfort zone. Increase clock frequency in small steps, increase voltage only as you need to, and test for stability and thermal performance at every step.
Well you can easily find the specs of Xbox1/PS4 and pretty much Imagine what PC you need to smoothly run the game like in E3 demo on High specs (since consoles will run the game on high, PCs can run it on Ultra)Does somebody know the specs of a PC that Witcher 3 was running on during the E3 presentations? I know the first one was xbone but, it would be really nice to know it, you know, just to prepare our wallets...
Those specs will be enough to play it on High settings at 1080p a.k.a. to make it look like E3 demo. For example Xbox one specs are lower than those that you stated above (it's "gpu" is not close to 760 ti). Im personally have a 16:10 monitor (I know it sucks) 1680x1050 is it's native resolution and my specs are same as yours. I pretty sure I will be able to run it and make it look good/better than what we saw from Xbox One demo.I bet 8 Gb and a GTX 760 ti 2Gb will be enough on low resolutions (under 1400). Higher resolutions (1900 up) will probably need more ram and a better vga
Those specs will be enough to play it on High settings at 1080p a.k.a. to make it look like E3 demo. For example Xbox one specs are lower than those that you stated above (it's "gpu" is not close to 760 ti). Im personally have a 16:10 monitor (I know it sucks) 1680x1050 is it's native resolution and my specs are same as yours. I pretty sure I will be able to run it and make it look good/better than what we saw from Xbox One demo.
@DexiZzz - no you will need 3x way SLI TITAN and 50gb of RAMS. Thant should be "enough".