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Title: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Riggswolfe on March 11, 2008, 05:55:57 AM
I was considering upgrading my PC to the new shininess level, which would mean a new motherboard, probably new ram, two new CPUs and two new graphics cards. I was thinking about this because then I could get whatever games I wanted for a year or two. Then I did the price in my head.

WTF? Is PC gaming finally just getting too expensive? I bitched about PS3 price but it's nothing compared to having a decent system for PC gaming, a genre which has less interesting games every year. In the last year I've gotten: Civ IV, Dawn of War, and the Witcher for my PC. And I'm the type that usually buys at least one, if not more, games a month.

So, thoughts? Am I the only one that's wondering why I keep upgrading my PC?


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: ajax34i on March 11, 2008, 06:03:24 AM
Well, I paid $2000.00 for my dual 8800 gt system (has 4 gigs of ram, dual 320 hard drives, motherboard that can take 3 cards in SLI, and 1 processor) and I expect it to last 3 years.  And it might, too (I figure the SATA, PCI-E, and DDR3 standards will last that long, not sure about LGA775).  Similar system from Dell... $2500.

PC's are getting cheaper, IMO.  But, there seem to be fewer games (that I'm interested in) made for them.

It'll probably be the last upgrade I do.  I'm waiting for the prices of HDTV's to come down some more, and then I'm probably switching to a big one + Xbox or PS3.   We only have CRT TV's at our house right now, kinda sucks.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Arrrgh on March 11, 2008, 06:12:39 AM
I was considering upgrading my PC to the new shininess level, which would mean a new motherboard, probably new ram, two new CPUs and two new graphics cards. I was thinking about this because then I could get whatever games I wanted for a year or two. Then I did the price in my head.

WTF? Is PC gaming finally just getting too expensive? I bitched about PS3 price but it's nothing compared to having a decent system for PC gaming, a genre which has less interesting games every year. In the last year I've gotten: Civ IV, Dawn of War, and the Witcher for my PC. And I'm the type that usually buys at least one, if not more, games a month.

So, thoughts? Am I the only one that's wondering why I keep upgrading my PC?

You don't need two vid cards to play any of the games you mentioned. I'm also not sure why you need two CPUs when you can get quad core single chips now.



Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: ajax34i on March 11, 2008, 06:27:11 AM
I agree, too.  Don't pay 5x as much for a 10% increase in performance.  A core2 duo or quad processor is good enough.  I went for 2 vid cards, but 1 would have probably been sufficient for a while, and then I could have paid $250 for a newer one in a year (instead of 2 x $250 now).


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Sky on March 11, 2008, 08:13:26 AM
Two cpu and two gpu?  :awesome_for_real:


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Dash on March 11, 2008, 09:04:07 AM
Yah the two and two is killing you heh.  You could get a plenty fast PC for way under a grand including monitor and all the extras.  Upgrade and you're talking easily under 500 bucks for a new CPU, GPU, and Motherboard , and that's for some really nice stuff.  It's not SLI 8800 Ultras but you know... depends on what you need it for.

I'll probably upgrade myself as some games I'm watching come closer to being released.  Definitely some good games out though on PC to upgrade for if you cant run them well.  Orange Box and CoD4 come immediately to mind.  Bioshock, Mass Effect etc.  I'm looking forward to Warhammer Online and Starcraft II is coming out... eventually.  Will be nice to run them with all the eye candy.



Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Stormwaltz on March 11, 2008, 09:36:05 AM
My current PC was a $3000 rig bought four years ago. It was not bleeding edge - it was full of solid high-average hardware (256 MB Radeon 9800, Athlon 64 3200+, 1 GB RAM). I only really splurged on the Audigy ZX Platinum sound card. It runs most modern games with little difficulty. I don't get all the latest PixelShader 3-point-WTF bells and shinies... but I'm not much of a graphics whore. The extent of my indulgence is cranking up all the landscape details in LotRO. I like me my horizons.

My point being that well-chosen PC hardware can last you  for 3-5 years. Maybe more if you're less concerned about shinies. If what you've got still works well, don't upgrade now. You know everything will get faster/cheaper/better/more when you DO have to.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Signe on March 11, 2008, 10:10:10 AM
The computer I'm using right now to play a couple of the latest beta tests of what will be allegedly the biggie games launched this year is a piece of poo.   It's a 2005 open box, Athlon 64 3200+,  that cost about $500. It was dusty when I bought it, too.  Dammit.  I put in a couple a gig of cheap ram (to make it 2) and a Geforce 7800 GT.  I can play any game out now plus both betas at high settings with now problems.  I reckon I have at least another year of life in this POS.  Maybe two.  If I wanted to do anything graphically fancy other than gaming, I'd use a Mac, anyway.  We have a house full of those things.  But for gaming?  I'll use it until I have to put my game settings so low that my butt goes blurry.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Grand Design on March 11, 2008, 10:37:12 AM
I still use a P4 that I built about four years ago.  It still runs AGP video, although I upgrade the card once a year.  I can play anything on it.  CoD4 in the highest widescreen resolution with bells and whistles, no problem.  I had an itch about a year ago to build a new one, but after seeing my "old" PC whip out BioShock, I've put it off for a while. 

So, thoughts? Am I the only one that's wondering why I keep upgrading my PC?

I like upgrading my PC, personally.  It reminds me that, for once, I did the right thing by not running out and getting a quad core pci express dual super bionic graphics card with chips.  Not that many developers are even taking advantage of all these redundant components anyway.

As to the relevancy of PC gaming - as long as there are MMOs and FPS', arguably the two largest and most attractive subsets of gaming, there will be PCs to play them on.  When I'm playing Spreadsheets In Space, I need at least two machines, and preferably a laptop for quick web browsing.  I can't do that on a PS3.  It would never, ever work.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Riggswolfe on March 11, 2008, 10:40:15 AM
Well, since I get a discount for my state being on an exclusive Dell contract I got a Dell. Here's the specs:

    Intel  Core Quad-Core (8MB L2 cache,2.4GHz,1066FSB)
   3GB Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM at 800MHz - 4 DIMMs
    Dual nVidia GeForce 8800 GT 512MB
    250GB - Seagate 7200RPM, SATA 3.0Gb/s, 8MB Cache
     Genuine Windows Vista Home Premium
   Single Drive: 16X CD/DVD burner (DVD+/-RW) w/double layer write capability
    Integrated 7.1 Channel Audio
    AGEIA Phys physics accelerator
    Windows Vista Premium
   Included 10GB DataSafe Online Backup for 1Year

I'm a little worried that the processor may be a bit low. The ram I can switch out later for better sticks if needed. I went with Vista to get DirectX 10 and because there wasn't much of a savings benefit. In the past I've always built my PCs but honestly, I'm tired of doing that. This has a tower so I should be able to upgrade fairly easily on my own if needed. I also have my own sound card in my current PC I can yank out and plop into this one instead of the integrated sound.

Now I just need to get a better monitor than my CRT POS and I'm set. I think. Any comments?


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Grand Design on March 11, 2008, 10:44:45 AM
...and all my talk about upgrading goes right out the window as I sit here drooling over those specs.  Nice one.

I snagged a 22 inch LG LCD for a decent price and I am in love with it.  I write it little notes during my lunch break.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Riggswolfe on March 11, 2008, 10:56:37 AM
I checked the power supply, since I was a bit concerned. 750 watts. For those of you who are curious this is a modified 720 XPS. Dell's "gaming" computer.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: ajax34i on March 11, 2008, 11:05:27 AM
I got almost that spec, like I said.  Your CPU is quad-core 2.4 GHz, mine is dual-core 3.0 GHz, and all things considered, the difference between 2.4 and 3.0 isn't that big.  Esp. since you have two extra cores (dunno if current games make good use of multi cores, but eh).

Dell uses the BTX form factor, I think, which might force you to buy upgrades from them, if any. 

If the power supply is 700W, I think that's good enough, that's what I have.  Your only issue will be finding a UPS that can support 700W, heh.  My lights dim briefly when I turn the PC on, and I know that during summer we have (under)voltage problems, so I need a UPS for the voltage regulation, but they seem to run $300+.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Riggswolfe on March 11, 2008, 11:24:42 AM
Dell uses the BTX form factor, I think, which might force you to buy upgrades from them, if any. 

Yeah, that's why I usually just build my PCs. But honestly, I'm too short on time to do that these days. And too lazy. The last one I bought the parts and my friend put it together in exchange for my old CPU and MB. I could do it I just didn't want to deal with it. Now that tech support is my job I have even less urge to build PCs at home.

And it is definitely BTX. I don't like that much but I can swap out PCI components, ram, and hard drives without needing them so I should be fine on that aspect.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Engels on March 11, 2008, 12:28:08 PM
If you wanna cut down on costs, don't go for the dual vid card. A single GT should tear through most of the stuff out there today. Also, what's with the Data safe 10gig online backup? How much are they asking for it and what's the attraction above, say, just a USB 60gig hard drive?


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Riggswolfe on March 11, 2008, 12:57:16 PM
If you wanna cut down on costs, don't go for the dual vid card. A single GT should tear through most of the stuff out there today. Also, what's with the Data safe 10gig online backup? How much are they asking for it and what's the attraction above, say, just a USB 60gig hard drive?

The online backup was included. I went through the list of customizations and taking it off saved me $0. I'm guessing they've got some kind of promotional agreement or something.

As for the Dual graphics cards, it came with one but I added the second because..errr...I really wanted it. I know. Silly. And un-needed.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: fuser on March 11, 2008, 03:30:40 PM
Well, since I get a discount for my state being on an exclusive Dell contract I got a Dell. Here's the specs:

    Intel  Core Quad-Core (8MB L2 cache,2.4GHz,1066FSB)
   3GB Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM at 800MHz - 4 DIMMs
    Dual nVidia GeForce 8800 GT 512MB
    250GB - Seagate 7200RPM, SATA 3.0Gb/s, 8MB Cache
     Genuine Windows Vista Home Premium
   Single Drive: 16X CD/DVD burner (DVD+/-RW) w/double layer write capability
    Integrated 7.1 Channel Audio
    AGEIA Phys physics accelerator
    Windows Vista Premium
   Included 10GB DataSafe Online Backup for 1Year

I'm a little worried that the processor may be a bit low. The ram I can switch out later for better sticks if needed. I went with Vista to get DirectX 10 and because there wasn't much of a savings benefit. In the past I've always built my PCs but honestly, I'm tired of doing that. This has a tower so I should be able to upgrade fairly easily on my own if needed. I also have my own sound card in my current PC I can yank out and plop into this one instead of the integrated sound.

Now I just need to get a better monitor than my CRT POS and I'm set. I think. Any comments?

I had a Dell E521 AMD system for a long while but went back to building my own system when I needed to upgrade.

What model is this an XPS? Throw out the physics card it's useless(if you can), throw out the ram and buy online(unless its the dell deal of the day ;) ), no need for an external sound card imho, use the savings and buy a 22"+ LCD.

I have an Optiplex 755 with a Q6600 next to me which is another great platform for gaming.. say something like an Optiplex 330 with a q6600 + after market video card (only issue is the 755/330 will only support single slot cards say a 8800gt) + psu or a vostro 200.

Either way it's a good system. I love how quiet the BTX layouts are! The q6600 is a decent chip but remember your betting on threading in the future :uhrr: vs high clock speed right now. If its strictly gaming try to get a dual core or hold off for a bit and dell should have the new 45nm quad core revision soon (q9300)  :grin:


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Riggswolfe on March 12, 2008, 06:08:20 AM
It's already in production, I don't think I can make any changes now. I threw in the physics card just for the hell of it. It was like $150. I didn't buy an external sound card, I'm taking the one out of my old computer so no worries there.

And it's an XPS 720. The rig is mostly for Gaming though I do some other stuff on my PC these days. Again, I could have swapped out the quad core but since it's in production now I think I'm committed. No biggie. Alot of the stuff on it is the cheap stuff, the only add-ons is the extra vid card (cause I wanted it to be honest not for any practical reason), the physics card (ditto). The ram was "standard" and I saved $0 for lowering the amount.

I suppose I should have removed the physics card and swapped for a dual core with a slightly higher FSB and 3.0 gig instead of 2.4 but hmmmm...




Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: fuser on March 12, 2008, 06:44:38 AM
I suppose I should have removed the physics card and swapped for a dual core with a slightly higher FSB and 3.0 gig instead of 2.4 but hmmmm...

Don't worry about it too much your going to be GPU limited these days anyhoo. If you do any divx encoding or folding@home your going to be in heaven with that machine over the dual core.

Have fun it's a very nice machine :awesome_for_real:

(fyi: im running an e2160 @2.5ghz with an 8800gt on a 22" LCD 1680x1050 with WoW/LFS/TF2/CS at full detail at great rates)


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Riggswolfe on March 12, 2008, 07:24:02 AM
Ok, I ripped out the PhysX accelerator and upgraded Vista to Ultimate. I think. The Indian guy at Dell was confused and I practically had to yell to tell him I did not want to DOWNGRADE my version of Vista and get rid of my graphics cards. Needless to say I'll be going over the order confirmation email with a fine-toothed comb.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Riggswolfe on March 12, 2008, 07:50:04 AM
Ok, it looks like things are changed. Bye bye physics card, hello Vista Ultimate. I kept the quad core despite wavering because I'm planning a dual monitor setup, WAR/WOW/Conan/whatever in one screen, Allakhazam/Gamefaqs/etc in the other.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: MrHat on March 12, 2008, 08:10:43 AM
Might as well roll Vista 64 and add a gig of ram.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Sky on March 12, 2008, 08:14:49 AM
WoW should never be used as a bragging point for graphics prowess. Try running EQ2 at max settings, it lays the hurt on my overclocked 8800 gtx (e6600, 2GB ram). EQ2 and Crysis are really the only things to lay the hurt on the rig, the Crysis demo pumps heat up to 85C but runs smoothly for the most part.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: fuser on March 12, 2008, 10:47:12 AM
WoW should never be used as a bragging point for graphics prowess.

Giving an example that even my lowly budget CPU/middle of the road GPU isn't the limiting factor on my gaming experience at resolution.

WAR/WOW/Conan/whatever in one screen


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: OcellotJenkins on March 12, 2008, 03:08:05 PM
the Crysis demo pumps heat up to 85C but runs smoothly for the most part.

Holy fucking shit man, surely you don't push it that hard often.  I doubt you'd get a year out of the CPU with it getting that hot.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Jimbo on March 12, 2008, 03:14:23 PM
What is a good range to keep your gear running at in degree's?  I keep mine about about 34 C on CPU and 24 HDD, but mine is getting long in tooth (hence the need to upgrade mine and my kids and make it last 5 years...damn college!). 


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Sky on March 13, 2008, 07:36:12 AM
the Crysis demo pumps heat up to 85C but runs smoothly for the most part.

Holy fucking shit man, surely you don't push it that hard often.  I doubt you'd get a year out of the CPU with it getting that hot.
Normally 70C under load (EQ2 with all bells + whistles).

One reason I've been debating whether I want to get Crysis or not. It's the only thing that cranks it that high. FEAR might push it to 74C or so.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: OcellotJenkins on March 13, 2008, 10:48:14 AM
the Crysis demo pumps heat up to 85C but runs smoothly for the most part.

Holy fucking shit man, surely you don't push it that hard often.  I doubt you'd get a year out of the CPU with it getting that hot.
Normally 70C under load (EQ2 with all bells + whistles).

One reason I've been debating whether I want to get Crysis or not. It's the only thing that cranks it that high. FEAR might push it to 74C or so.

Granted I'm not very up to date with the latest processor specs, but back when I was building AMD machines 65-75C was considered critical territory for CPU temp and 85C would pretty much result in a dead chip.  If you can run 70C for extended periods of time then I guess things have improved quite a bit.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: tkinnun0 on March 13, 2008, 12:07:43 PM
I recently upgraded my computer for Crysis. Out went 2 SLId 7800GTs, replaced with a single 8800GT. The rest of the machine (AMD Athlon 64 X2@2.21GHz, 2GB RAM) stayed the same.

I get framerates ranging from high 20s (the beginning) to slideshow (some scripted sequences, end of end-boss fight) running in 1600x1200 with very high settings in DX9. Plenty playable for me.

I considered getting another 8800GT, but the framerate increase would have only have been something like 33%, which I don't think is very good value. The GPU is definitely the bottleneck in Crysis, I expect that trend to continue and GHz numbers seem to have plateaued, so my CPU and RAM should be fine for at least 3 years, even if I switch to Vista at some point.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Sky on March 13, 2008, 12:26:10 PM
Granted I'm not very up to date with the latest processor specs, but back when I was building AMD machines 65-75C was considered critical territory for CPU temp and 85C would pretty much result in a dead chip.  If you can run 70C for extended periods of time then I guess things have improved quite a bit.
GPU. CPU probably doesn't run over 40C, I haven't really looked too closely at it since the initial stress-testing, so I can't recall the exact figure. It's a Core 2 Duo with a Scythe Ninja chop-socky super 120mm fan thingy, so it's pretty cool.

Note on Crysis - make sure you hack it for the "dx10-only" effects. They look wicked.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: SnakeCharmer on March 13, 2008, 01:59:37 PM
What's the usual op temp for a GPU?  SysFan is telling me that SOMETHING is running at over 100C at idle, which I find hard to believe.  No problems with the system, but it's always bugging me that it actually IS running that hot.  FWIW, Q6600 and 8800GTS


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: MahrinSkel on March 13, 2008, 08:08:36 PM
What's the usual op temp for a GPU?  SysFan is telling me that SOMETHING is running at over 100C at idle, which I find hard to believe.  No problems with the system, but it's always bugging me that it actually IS running that hot.  FWIW, Q6600 and 8800GTS
I would say that would have to be a malfunctioning/disconnected sensor.  If anything was actually running that hot, you'd be smelling it.

--Dave


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Tale on March 13, 2008, 08:35:01 PM
I took a very easy and cheap path to Core 2 Duo and 8800, running stuff like Crysis and COD4 on a Dell 24" monitor (flawlessly at 1920x1200).

I started with a P4 2.4GHz system with 1Gb of DDR333 RAM and a 6800GS AGP.

I rebuilt that on an ASRock 775Dual-VSTA (http://www.asrock.com/mb/overview.asp?Model=775Dual-vsta) motherboard (supports both AGP and PCI-e, DDR and DDRII), upgraded to the latest bios (compatibility and stability), with a very cheap Core 2 Duo E6300 processor. I think it cost me about $200 all up, and that was more than a year ago.

This gave me a Core 2 Duo, 1Gb DDR RAM and 6800GS. Over the next 12 months, I upgraded to 2GB DDR2 (when RAM was very cheap) and an 8800 GTS 320Mb (totally fine at any resolution, the early reviews where it slowed at higher resolutions were due to a now-fixed driver bug). Both are current technologies that will last significant time, spending minimum cash.

So now I've got a Core 2 Duo, 2GB DDR2 RAM, 8800 GTS. Still using my case and drives from the old PC, no problems. The next step is to rebuild it on a newer motherboard and overclock the Core 2 Duo to 3GHz (which it should do happily), then upgrade one of the hard drives to become the new C: - not that it feels like it even needs it yet.

I've only spent a few hundred bucks and can run everything well. I've not run into any bottlenecks at all.

Also, SLI is bullshit. You only need one graphics card, because it is now the central feature of a gaming PC and saving the money for a single video card upgrade when the next generation comes along in a few months will wipe the floor with the minimal boost you could have gotten from SLI.

Vista is also bullshit. It's Windows ME for a new generation. XP is the Windows 98.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Riggswolfe on March 14, 2008, 05:56:27 AM
Vista is also bullshit. It's Windows ME for a new generation. XP is the Windows 98.

I got Vista for several reasons:

1) The first Service Pack is out.
2) I use it at work and it seems stable for the most part.
3) DirectX 10
4) XP support is already starting to disappear in some respects.
5) There wasn't a significant savings getting XP over Vista.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: ajax34i on March 14, 2008, 06:06:29 AM
I'll probably get Vista in another year when there's even more support for it.  The SLI motherboard and big power supply I got for when they change the standard from PCI-E to something else, so I can extend the life of my PC a little bit more.  But, like I said, I'm waiting to see what the switch to DTV will do to  HDTV prices, and once we get one of those, consoles will enter the list of options for me, and the PC might exit (in which case I expect my current computer to last 10+ years).


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: SnakeCharmer on March 14, 2008, 07:27:33 AM
I think I'm one of the few people that has zero regrets going Vista.  It's worked nearly flawlessly since install, not a single driver issue.  After doing some recommended Vista tweaks that I found on web searches, I've been extremely happy. 


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Engels on March 14, 2008, 08:56:43 AM
After doing some recommended Vista tweaks that I found on web searches, I've been extremely happy. 

care to share?


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: fuser on March 15, 2008, 11:06:44 AM
What's the usual op temp for a GPU?  SysFan is telling me that SOMETHING is running at over 100C at idle, which I find hard to believe.  No problems with the system, but it's always bugging me that it actually IS running that hot.  FWIW, Q6600 and 8800GTS
I would say that would have to be a malfunctioning/disconnected sensor.  If anything was actually running that hot, you'd be smelling it.

Funny you mention that. Had a friend who was complaining his video card was slower then a few months ago. Got the PC from him and watched the GPU temp with ATITool (http://www.techpowerup.com/atitool/), and the CPU with CoreTemp (http://www.alcpu.com/CoreTemp/).

Playing WoW(even without its taxing graphics etc) the temps reached 103c and the card started to throttle back core/memory Mhz. We let it cool down for 30mins picked it apart

  (http://www.binfuser.com/files/card2.jpg)

The whole heatsink fins under the silver was completely caked and blocked with dust. The dust was a blackish ting so it was heating up and burning. After cleaning the fins out and putting the cover back on it was back into 50-60c under load.

You couldn't smell the burning dust, only some slowdown and loud fan was noticeable.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Engels on March 15, 2008, 12:41:34 PM
I have a 8800 GT and even under load it doesn't go above 65~ish. So ya, I'd venture a guess that either your temp sensor is being read incorrectly or you need to vaccum that puppy asap.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: SnakeCharmer on March 16, 2008, 08:24:47 PM
After doing some recommended Vista tweaks that I found on web searches, I've been extremely happy. 

care to share?

I ran a google search for vista tweaks, and basically just followed them.  I'd suggest reading through them before you do it.  Vista (apparently) has TONS of ancillary services running in the background that 98 percent of us probably don't need.  www.vistatweaks.com was an easy one to read and use. 


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Engels on March 16, 2008, 08:54:32 PM
Don't think you mean www.vistatweaks.com. That site, el no existe.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: SnakeCharmer on March 17, 2008, 05:32:45 AM
Oops.  www.tweakvista.com


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Dash on March 17, 2008, 06:14:38 AM
I took a very easy and cheap path to Core 2 Duo and 8800, running stuff like Crysis and COD4 on a Dell 24" monitor (flawlessly at 1920x1200).

I started with a P4 2.4GHz system with 1Gb of DDR333 RAM and a 6800GS AGP.

Almost exactly what I'm planning to do.  I have a P4 3.0GHz and 2GB with the same 6800GS AGP.  I'm waiting on availability of the E8400 Wolfdale Core 2 Duo and will probably pull the trigger, add a 8800GT and go from there. 

Which Dell 24" monitor do you have, the 2407?



Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Velorath on March 17, 2008, 10:42:19 AM
I took a very easy and cheap path to Core 2 Duo and 8800, running stuff like Crysis and COD4 on a Dell 24" monitor (flawlessly at 1920x1200).

I started with a P4 2.4GHz system with 1Gb of DDR333 RAM and a 6800GS AGP.

Almost exactly what I'm planning to do.  I have a P4 3.0GHz and 2GB with the same 6800GS AGP.  I'm waiting on availability of the E8400 Wolfdale Core 2 Duo and will probably pull the trigger, add a 8800GT and go from there. 

Which Dell 24" monitor do you have, the 2407?



If you can't find the e8400 anywhere, the Xeon e3110 is supposed to be the exactly the same, just repackaged as a server processor.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Tale on March 17, 2008, 11:34:51 PM
Which Dell 24" monitor do you have, the 2407?

2407WFP rev A02


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: fuser on March 18, 2008, 09:46:19 AM
If you can't find the e8400 anywhere, the Xeon e3110 is supposed to be the exactly the same, just repackaged as a server processor.

Indeed demand (http://www.shopblt.com/cgi-bin/shop/shop.cgi?action=thispage&thispage=0110030005018_BN60960P.shtml&order_id=382373675) on them are crazy, 31st is supposedly the next shipment :(


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Velorath on March 18, 2008, 10:55:22 AM
If you can't find the e8400 anywhere, the Xeon e3110 is supposed to be the exactly the same, just repackaged as a server processor.

Indeed demand (http://www.shopblt.com/cgi-bin/shop/shop.cgi?action=thispage&thispage=0110030005018_BN60960P.shtml&order_id=382373675) on them are crazy, 31st is supposedly the next shipment :(

The e3110's seem to be selling well at a lot of places too, since it people found out it was the same thing.  ExcaliburPC still has some in stock though for $229 (http://www.excaliberpc.com/Intel_BX80570E3110_Xeon_E3110_3.00GHz/BX80570E3110/partinfo-id-584805.html).


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Engels on March 18, 2008, 03:18:04 PM
Almost exactly what I'm planning to do.  I have a P4 3.0GHz and 2GB with the same 6800GS AGP.  I'm waiting on availability of the E8400 Wolfdale Core 2 Duo and will probably pull the trigger, add a 8800GT and go from there. 

Slow down there hos. Might wanna check to see what chipset you're running on your MoBo. Although both use the L775 socket, I believe P4s use 92x chipsets and below, whereas C2Ds are confined to 965 and above.

E8400:

G31 Express chipset,
G33 Express Chipset,
G35 Express chipset,
P35 Express chipset,
Q33 Express chipset,
Q35 Express chipset,
X38 Express chipset,
P31 Express chipset

Pentium 4:

Intel® 925X Chipset ,
Intel® 915P Express Chipset,
Intel® 915G Express Chipset 925X Express Chipset,
Intel® 925XE Express** Chipset,
915G Express Chipset,
915GV Express Chipset,
915GL Express Chipset,
915P Express Chipset,
915PL Express Chipset

From http://compare.intel.com/pcc/default.aspx?familyID=1
 


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Falwell on March 18, 2008, 09:06:51 PM
If you can't find the e8400 anywhere, the Xeon e3110 is supposed to be the exactly the same, just repackaged as a server processor.

Indeed demand (http://www.shopblt.com/cgi-bin/shop/shop.cgi?action=thispage&thispage=0110030005018_BN60960P.shtml&order_id=382373675) on them are crazy, 31st is supposedly the next shipment :(

The e3110's seem to be selling well at a lot of places too, since it people found out it was the same thing.  ExcaliburPC still has some in stock though for $229 (http://www.excaliberpc.com/Intel_BX80570E3110_Xeon_E3110_3.00GHz/BX80570E3110/partinfo-id-584805.html).

I got lucky and caught Mwave with E8400's in last week. Price gouged of course at 265 for OEM but meh, it's either that or wait till god knows when.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Riggswolfe on March 19, 2008, 06:27:31 AM
Alright, got my new computer in. It's sweet. It has a few corny "look at me!" bits like these glowing LEDs in the case that do nothing but look cool. Oooook.

The first thing I did was install the Witcher, max out all the settings and jack the resolution up to 1600X1200. On my old computer I ran it at 1024X768 on medium settings.

It's like a whole different game. It performs beautifully and looks amazing. So far I'm very happy with this new computer.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Dash on March 19, 2008, 06:54:56 PM
Almost exactly what I'm planning to do.  I have a P4 3.0GHz and 2GB with the same 6800GS AGP.  I'm waiting on availability of the E8400 Wolfdale Core 2 Duo and will probably pull the trigger, add a 8800GT and go from there. 

Slow down there hos. Might wanna check to see what chipset you're running on your MoBo. Although both use the L775 socket, I believe P4s use 92x chipsets and below, whereas C2Ds are confined to 965 and above.



Oh yah sorry, this will be a completely new build not an upgrade, I thought you did a new build as well.  I'm thinking Abit IP35-Pro motherboard although people are telling me I dont need all the bells and whistles so maybe a lower end board, we'll see.

If you can't find the e8400 anywhere, the Xeon e3110 is supposed to be the exactly the same, just repackaged as a server processor.

Indeed demand (http://www.shopblt.com/cgi-bin/shop/shop.cgi?action=thispage&thispage=0110030005018_BN60960P.shtml&order_id=382373675) on them are crazy, 31st is supposedly the next shipment :(

The e3110's seem to be selling well at a lot of places too, since it people found out it was the same thing.  ExcaliburPC still has some in stock though for $229 (http://www.excaliberpc.com/Intel_BX80570E3110_Xeon_E3110_3.00GHz/BX80570E3110/partinfo-id-584805.html).

Yah I've been hearing about the e3110's too.  I'm not in a rush so maybe I'll wait til the 31st and see what happens.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Dash on March 19, 2008, 06:57:08 PM
Alright, got my new computer in. It's sweet. It has a few corny "look at me!" bits like these glowing LEDs in the case that do nothing but look cool. Oooook.

The first thing I did was install the Witcher, max out all the settings and jack the resolution up to 1600X1200. On my old computer I ran it at 1024X768 on medium settings.

It's like a whole different game. It performs beautifully and looks amazing. So far I'm very happy with this new computer.

Nice.  Everything go smooth with Dell?


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Engels on March 19, 2008, 07:15:38 PM

Oh yah sorry, this will be a completely new build not an upgrade, I thought you did a new build as well.  I'm thinking Abit IP35-Pro motherboard although people are telling me I dont need all the bells and whistles so maybe a lower end board, we'll see.


If you're going all out and building a new rig, I'd consider a newer chipset. Nothing's wrong with the P35, got one myself, but now I'd probably go for the X38 or X48, probably from this selection (http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2010200280+1070509908+107172333+50001315&Configurator=&Subcategory=280&description=&Ntk=&srchInDesc=)

I've heard good things about the new-ish 780i  (http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813131247) boards, but to be honest, Nvidia chipsets have always scared me off.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Riggswolfe on March 20, 2008, 05:45:38 AM
Nice.  Everything go smooth with Dell?

Yes it did. I actually got the computer almost a week earlier than their estimate. I discovered my old soundcard doesn't work with Vista so I'm stuck with onboard sound but other than that things are fine. I'm considering buying Crysis to see if I can make this PC cry...


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Numtini on March 20, 2008, 06:20:16 AM
For those who are on Vista successfully, are you on 32 or 64 bit? My XP installation is a year old and faltering, so I installed Vista 64 (Business with SP1 included on the install disk) yesterday and while LOTRO was pretty, I was getting a lot of crashes in games, plus none of the music services work with 64bit. I'm wondering if 32 might be more stable.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Engels on March 20, 2008, 06:45:45 AM
Hey Nums,

I run Vista 32 and so far so good. A few issues here and there. Planetside has to be run in Windows 95 compatibility mode, and a few of my games require that I run the executable as an administrator, but so far, I'm good.



Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: SnakeCharmer on March 20, 2008, 07:05:58 AM
For those who are on Vista successfully, are you on 32 or 64 bit? My XP installation is a year old and faltering, so I installed Vista 64 (Business with SP1 included on the install disk) yesterday and while LOTRO was pretty, I was getting a lot of crashes in games, plus none of the music services work with 64bit. I'm wondering if 32 might be more stable.

I'm running the 64 bit, and so far havent had any problems.  I beginning to think I'm an exception to that rule, rather than the norm.  I have had problems with :nda:, but I kind of expected that.  I don't think that's a result of Vista; more likely due to the shit shitty client.

However, everything else runs fine.  I don't run any music services, though.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: fuser on March 20, 2008, 09:28:36 AM
For those who are on Vista successfully, are you on 32 or 64 bit? My XP installation is a year old and faltering, so I installed Vista 64 (Business with SP1 included on the install disk) yesterday and while LOTRO was pretty, I was getting a lot of crashes in games, plus none of the music services work with 64bit. I'm wondering if 32 might be more stable.

I'm running the 64 bit, and so far havent had any problems.  I beginning to think I'm an exception to that rule, rather than the norm.  I have had problems with :nda:, but I kind of expected that.  I don't think that's a result of Vista; more likely due to the shit shitty client.

However, everything else runs fine.  I don't run any music services, though.

Reinstalled Vista yesterday (downloaded the MSDN x64 edition with SP1), ran it past Vlite (http://www.vlite.net/) to put in the latest Intel chipset(for AHCI) + audio + video + network card. Install went pretty much seamless (well the beta nvidia driver failed and went back to WHQL  :uhrr: )

Some issues are fixed (the large file copy, network file copy, seems to be thrashing less for superfetch). Turned off the anti spyware(vlite) and put KIS 7.0 (http://usa.kaspersky.com/products_services/internet-security.php) on and the system is running really well. I had major issue with the system resume from a low power state which is now also resolved (BSOD on AHCI drivers).

I wonder if manhunt will now work ;)


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: murdoc on March 20, 2008, 09:42:59 AM
I had no issues with Vista until I dumped coffee into my laptop. Sent it in for repairs, they replaced the Motherboard, DVD drive, and Keyboard and sent it back. Ever since I've had nothing but problems, which suggests to me that they didn't replace all the parts they needed to. That might work to my advantage however since they sent it back, said it was fixed and my 12 months of warranty restarted. I'm currently waiting on a new 8700 GT that's replacing the coffee stained one under warranty.

Problems I have no are that it won't shutdown, just reboots every time and I am having a LOT of graphics errors where it says that the device driver has failed. I've tried a ton of different drivers and it hasn't fixed the issue, so their new plan is replace all the heatsinks and graphics card.

Before the coffee incident I was playing everything from Fallout 1 & 2 to Portal with no issues at all.


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: rattran on March 20, 2008, 05:23:21 PM
I've had no non-user-caused problems with vista x64, currently running a DFI LT X38. Nice board.

I was using an evga 780i. There's some stuff I hate about the layout of the board, and some bad design decisions. Big long heatsink to cover everything from mosfets to mcp. I had to remove it, lap and smooth, bend it in one place, just to get the mcp down to an unacceptable 70c under load.
And the fan on it blows across fins directly into the back side of the primary graphics card. Overheated and fried the fan on one of my 8800gt cards.  :ye_gods: The xfx uses the same basic layout, dunno about any others.



Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Tale on March 21, 2008, 01:54:41 AM
I'm considering buying Crysis to see if I can make this PC cry...

You don't need to buy it, you can try melting your PC just the same with the demo: http://www.crysisdemo.com/download.htm


Title: Re: PC gaming - thoughts?
Post by: Big Gulp on March 21, 2008, 03:00:52 AM
I'm running the 64 bit, and so far havent had any problems.  I beginning to think I'm an exception to that rule, rather than the norm.  I have had problems with :nda:, but I kind of expected that.  I don't think that's a result of Vista; more likely due to the shit shitty client.

However, everything else runs fine.  I don't run any music services, though.

Same here, smooth sailing with x64.  Although, were it not for wanting all of my RAM supported I'd still be using x32.  Unless you've got at least 4 gigs of RAM there's really no reason to be using 64 bit Vista.