@Cranler said:
Nice try? I proved you couldn't keep your 7800 if you wanted to play all games.
800 minimum began in 2010 with Just Cause 2.
No shit?
You actually never stipulated the need to play "all games," but redefining things seems to be your "thing."
My original point still stands.
You're not FORCED to upgrade unless you insist on playing the minority of games that actually require you to upgrade, or if you just want greater resolution and framerate.
If you can't afford to upgrade your GPU after 5 years, or you just happen to have a particular fondness for the cinematic feel of 30fps @ < 1080p, then you probably should stick to being a peasant.
My level of interest in the JC series is up there with that of Infamous Second Son, Prototype, or The Last of Us.
In other words, zero, but I guess I should be bothered by the fact that, I wouldn't have been able to play it if I hadn't already upgraded my GPU and assuming that I ever had any interest in the game.
@Cranler said:
Nothing wrong with comparing the nividia's amd equivalent to the 360 gpu.
Except when there are more valid comparisons of cards from the same manufacturer that produced the Xbox's chip and during a a time when NVIDIA's cards were stronger than AMD's.
@Cranler said:
I asked what $200 card in 2006 and you link a 2007 card.
You got me.
I linked a GPU from the SAME SERIES released a year later.
According to your own statement about Just Cause 2, 2010 finally saw the release of a game that actually required a minimum of an 8800.
It only took 4 years after the release of the 8xxx card series and 5 years after the release of the 360, for a developer to actually bother trying to produce a game that actually requires it; since consoles could never be expected to match it.
A handful of other games that required an 8800 would follow the next year. Again, if you can't afford to upgrade your PC every five years, if not more regularly, then you probably belong on a console.
@Cranler said:
Using msrp unless you can prove it was impossible to find stores selling 360's under msrp.
Let's just go with your ridiculous processor estimate for a moment, combined with my corrected estimates, and even then, you're still ~$600 short of your $2000 claim...
Nevermind, that most PC gamers also tend to cannibalize what they can of their previous system to save money on a newer one (i.e. HDDs, DVD/CD Burner, case, etc.).
@Cranler said:
So your saying pc's can run games with the same amount of memory as consoles?
No, I'm saying that 512GB of RAM matches the amount of RAM found in a 360.
Reread your original ludicrous statement:
@Cranler said:
You needed a $2000 pc to match the 360 in 2005
Log in to comment