• AC Mirage out now, on Ubisoft+ for $15

    From rms@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 5 19:16:52 2023
    Reviews for Assassin's Creed Mirage aren't stellar, but I'll point out that
    it is ~12-15 hours long, so you could sign up for one month of Ubisoft+ for $15, and play through the whole game, which seems reasonable to me. This is how I played the recent Dead Space release (on the EA Pro service) and was happy with the enjoyment per $.

    rms

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  • From Spalls Hurgenson@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 6 09:26:32 2023
    On Thu, 5 Oct 2023 19:16:52 -0600, "rms" <rsquiresMOO@MOOflashMOO.net>
    wrote:

    Reviews for Assassin's Creed Mirage aren't stellar, but I'll point out that >it is ~12-15 hours long, so you could sign up for one month of Ubisoft+ for >$15, and play through the whole game, which seems reasonable to me. This is >how I played the recent Dead Space release (on the EA Pro service) and was >happy with the enjoyment per $.

    Meh. I'm so far behind on the Assassins Creed series, I see no
    immediate reason to grab this one.

    Especially given recent revelations about the C-levels at Ubisoft.
    They're not really the sort of company I want to be giving my money to
    right now.

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  • From rms@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 6 17:43:56 2023
    Meh. I'm so far behind on the Assassins Creed series, I see no
    immediate reason to grab this one.

    Ok that was a bad example, here's a better one: "Also another shout out
    to GeForce now. I’m playing Psycho pathtracing at 4k on a 4080 with 7ms network lag for $20 a month. makes it very hard to justify buying a new gaming PC for the prices a 4080/4090 based system commands" that's more in line with what I was thinking about.

    rms

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  • From JAB@21:1/5 to rms on Sat Oct 7 09:56:19 2023
    On 07/10/2023 00:43, rms wrote:
    Meh. I'm so far behind on the Assassins Creed series, I see no
    immediate reason to grab this one.

      Ok that was a bad example, here's a better one:  "Also another shout
    out to GeForce now. I’m playing Psycho pathtracing at 4k on a 4080 with
    7ms network lag for $20 a month.   makes it very hard to justify buying
    a new gaming PC for the prices a 4080/4090 based system commands"
    that's more in line with what I was thinking about.


    I can see the appeal of streaming services (you can have that sort of
    graphical fidelity without breaking into a sweat as you press the Add to
    Cart button for a top end GPU) but I'm still yet to be tempted as the
    games I now play* just don't need the power of a higher end system. My
    last upgrade (GPU + MB + CPU + RAM) was less than £400 and is perfectly
    fine for the games I play. I did think maybe I was just kidding myself
    and this was really a chicken and egg situation in that I didn't play
    games that require a high end PC because I didn't have a high end PC.
    Then I though about my previously PC which was the lower end of the high
    end for want of a better term. Did I play games that really required
    that type of performance, very rarely.

    *Over the years I've come to realise that the big hitter games requiring
    a good PC have gone in a direction that no longer aligns with what I
    look for in games.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Spalls Hurgenson@21:1/5 to JAB on Sat Oct 7 08:31:33 2023
    On Sat, 7 Oct 2023 09:56:19 +0100, JAB <noway@nochance.com> wrote:

    On 07/10/2023 00:43, rms wrote:
    Meh. I'm so far behind on the Assassins Creed series, I see no
    immediate reason to grab this one.

      Ok that was a bad example, here's a better one:  "Also another shout
    out to GeForce now. I’m playing Psycho pathtracing at 4k on a 4080 with
    7ms network lag for $20 a month.   makes it very hard to justify buying
    a new gaming PC for the prices a 4080/4090 based system commands"
    that's more in line with what I was thinking about.


    I can see the appeal of streaming services (you can have that sort of >graphical fidelity without breaking into a sweat as you press the Add to
    Cart button for a top end GPU) but I'm still yet to be tempted as the
    games I now play* just don't need the power of a higher end system. My
    last upgrade (GPU + MB + CPU + RAM) was less than £400 and is perfectly
    fine for the games I play. I did think maybe I was just kidding myself
    and this was really a chicken and egg situation in that I didn't play
    games that require a high end PC because I didn't have a high end PC.
    Then I though about my previously PC which was the lower end of the high
    end for want of a better term. Did I play games that really required
    that type of performance, very rarely.


    I agree.

    While I find GeForce Now neat on a technological front - playing
    "Doom" (2016) on an underpowered netbook was a hoot! - I just don't
    see the necessity of it, and the downsides of relying on a streaming
    service don't outweigh the upsides.

    Then again, I tend to be the opposite of JAB, where my PCs are usually
    closer to high-end, so I don't NEED a streaming service to get me
    ultra-class visuals; I have the hardware available locally. But even
    were my PC less impressive, I'm not sure I'd see the advantage to
    streaming services because most games just don't /need/ a high-end PC.

    Sure, there are some games where you won't get an enjoyable gaming
    experience without a mega-PC, but these are honestly rare. And
    certainly, the more grunt your computer has, the better the visuals
    will be. But even a modern potato-PC can still generate some pretty
    compelling visuals. Most low-end laptops today out-perform high-end
    PCs from ten years ago, and - while modern games at their best look
    fantastic - they really don't look THAT much better than games like
    "Mass Effect 3" or "Dishonored" or "Metro: Last Light".

    Good visuals have always been as much dependent on the skill of the
    artists as they have on the technology, after all.

    And that's even before you start considering that many developers are purposefully limiting themselves by creating retro-styled games, which
    greatly reduces how much processing power is required.


    TL;DR: Even with a ten-year old CPU/GPU, you can still get excellent
    visuals... and often enough, many of the best games don't even need
    that much power. If your PC is powerful enough to run a streaming
    service, its probably powerful enough for most games - especially the
    fun ones - too.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JAB@21:1/5 to Spalls Hurgenson on Sun Oct 8 10:15:50 2023
    On 07/10/2023 13:31, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
    On Sat, 7 Oct 2023 09:56:19 +0100, JAB <noway@nochance.com> wrote:

    On 07/10/2023 00:43, rms wrote:
    Meh. I'm so far behind on the Assassins Creed series, I see no
    immediate reason to grab this one.

      Ok that was a bad example, here's a better one:  "Also another shout >>> out to GeForce now. I’m playing Psycho pathtracing at 4k on a 4080 with >>> 7ms network lag for $20 a month.   makes it very hard to justify buying >>> a new gaming PC for the prices a 4080/4090 based system commands"
    that's more in line with what I was thinking about.


    I can see the appeal of streaming services (you can have that sort of
    graphical fidelity without breaking into a sweat as you press the Add to
    Cart button for a top end GPU) but I'm still yet to be tempted as the
    games I now play* just don't need the power of a higher end system. My
    last upgrade (GPU + MB + CPU + RAM) was less than £400 and is perfectly
    fine for the games I play. I did think maybe I was just kidding myself
    and this was really a chicken and egg situation in that I didn't play
    games that require a high end PC because I didn't have a high end PC.
    Then I though about my previously PC which was the lower end of the high
    end for want of a better term. Did I play games that really required
    that type of performance, very rarely.


    I agree.

    While I find GeForce Now neat on a technological front - playing
    "Doom" (2016) on an underpowered netbook was a hoot! - I just don't
    see the necessity of it, and the downsides of relying on a streaming
    service don't outweigh the upsides.

    Then again, I tend to be the opposite of JAB, where my PCs are usually
    closer to high-end, so I don't NEED a streaming service to get me
    ultra-class visuals; I have the hardware available locally. But even
    were my PC less impressive, I'm not sure I'd see the advantage to
    streaming services because most games just don't /need/ a high-end PC.

    Sure, there are some games where you won't get an enjoyable gaming
    experience without a mega-PC, but these are honestly rare. And
    certainly, the more grunt your computer has, the better the visuals
    will be. But even a modern potato-PC can still generate some pretty compelling visuals. Most low-end laptops today out-perform high-end
    PCs from ten years ago, and - while modern games at their best look
    fantastic - they really don't look THAT much better than games like
    "Mass Effect 3" or "Dishonored" or "Metro: Last Light".

    Good visuals have always been as much dependent on the skill of the
    artists as they have on the technology, after all.

    And that's even before you start considering that many developers are purposefully limiting themselves by creating retro-styled games, which greatly reduces how much processing power is required.


    TL;DR: Even with a ten-year old CPU/GPU, you can still get excellent visuals... and often enough, many of the best games don't even need
    that much power. If your PC is powerful enough to run a streaming
    service, its probably powerful enough for most games - especially the
    fun ones - too.


    Determining value for money is never as easy as it seems, although I
    think one of the major factors is what your anchor point is. So for me,
    and having read various posts of yours, that anchor point is more based
    on what level of graphics fidelity is acceptable. Where we obliviously
    differ is that you have a system that can reach an 'acceptable' level
    even if that is 4k+ plus all the extras. My system would very much choke
    to death if I tried doing that with say Cyberpunk but even if it was a
    game I really wanted to play I'm sure that I could get it running with
    the graphics at a level that is acceptable to me as my standard is as
    long as it doesn't make your eyes bleed I'm happy.

    A different perspective is if you're the type of gamer that keeps up
    with having a higher end system. The anchor point can then be how much
    does that cost and with the rise in GPU prices the answer is a lot more
    than it used to. Looking at it that way streaming services become far
    more attractive. Now of course that is not my perspective but neither of
    them is either right or wrong.

    To touch on something else you mentioned, graphics in older games vs.
    newer games. I tend to agree that even if the raw performance increases
    are quite dramatic over the last ten years what you actually get out is
    a lot less than is you say looked at a game from 2000 vs 2010. Crysis
    Warhead I think is a good example, released in 2008 and for me the
    visuals are still more than acceptable. Added to that is that it does
    feel that, as you say, a lot more devs. have now gone down the route of
    you don't need good graphics you need interesting graphics. Off the top
    of my head Sunless Sea, Firewatch and Disco Elysium are good examples of
    this. I'd assume that in many ways smaller devs. have basically been
    forced down the route as they just don't have the budgets to create all
    the assets required.

    So my final thoughts, I don't think streaming services are a fad, like
    VR seems to be, but I'm not sure how mainstream they will become.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Xocyll@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 8 08:02:17 2023
    Spalls Hurgenson <spallshurgenson@gmail.com> looked up from reading the entrails of the porn spammer to utter "The Augury is good, the signs
    say:
    <snip>

    TL;DR: Even with a ten-year old CPU/GPU, you can still get excellent >visuals... and often enough, many of the best games don't even need
    that much power. If your PC is powerful enough to run a streaming
    service, its probably powerful enough for most games - especially the
    fun ones - too.

    I just upgraded my system, well technically built a new one since
    literally nothing was re-usable.

    Athlon2 955 black with 16 GB of ram and a GTX 760 to a
    5600x with 64GB ram and 4060.

    Not the fastest, but a substantial upgrade from the athlon.
    Win11, I do not consider that an _upgrade_ from win7, sidegrade maybe,
    it is so fucking retarded. Right click, create folder, name folder,
    folder does not name, click and rename folder, folder does not rename -
    always throws an error "file not found" or somesuch bullshit.
    How the fuck did Microsoft fuck this up, it's a fucking core function?

    I am frankly amazed that the stock, company supplied default
    heat-sink/fan lasted this long unchanged.
    I think it's probably about a decade of 24/365 usage, maybe more.

    I turn off my computer when I move or change hardware - in the athlon's lifetime I changed video card a couple of times and sound card once.
    Oh and added harddrives. 1TB originally, followed by another, but an
    icky green one, than another 4TB.

    New system has a 2TB SSD and a 16TB regular (WD naturally, had great
    luck with those - old system's 6TB are all WD.)

    Xocyll

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