Originally Posted by rmcelwee
(Post 716887)
and THAT is why I don't play PC games...
I will admit to having gone out and spent a fair bit of money on a fancy sound card after ROTT came out. Anybody remember the Gravis Ultrasound? Yeah, that card was the shit. It's all good, though. I'd much rather trade off some graphics detail for mouse-based input. And frankly, with the resolution turned down a bit (from my system's native 1920x1200) and the detail controls set to medium, it still looks better than the first one, and plays quite smoothly
Originally Posted by ThatGuy85
(Post 716913)
I usually make it a point to spend at least 150-200 on a video card when building a new system.
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No $200 video cards for me. I just paid $30 for an XBox1 and $10 for a DuoX2 modchip. I've got something soldered wrong because it is not booting up correctly but it should be an easy fix (I hope). I was dying to play Black again and my other working XBox1 is hooked up as a video server and not really ready for playing games.
FWIW, here is Black (very cool game): |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 716931)
Given the number of PC-based games that I play in the average decade, I can't see myself spending any more than the bare minimum for a video card.
In other news, still plowing forward in Portal 2. It gets even more hilarious as I progress. Game of the year, hands down. |
Originally Posted by ThatGuy85
(Post 716951)
Ahh. I suppose that's where you and I differ then. I do 95% of my gaming on the computer
In other news, still plowing forward in Portal 2. It gets even more hilarious as I progress. Game of the year, hands down. |
Just beat it - the end is pretty cool. Got stuck for awhile in one of the levels - chapter 8. Apparently I wasn't trying in the right place.
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The last console I had was a Atari 2600. I only play games on PC and prefer to use a mouse and keyboard for input as I can't stand those thumb controllers. The most expensive part of my current PC is the video card (XFX 6970).
A friend just beat Portal 2 and was pleased with the game. I may end up buying it since I played through the first one. Amazon has it for $38. |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 716931)
It's all good, though. I'd much rather trade off some graphics detail for mouse-based input.
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Originally Posted by y8s
(Post 716984)
I googled the terms mouse with ps3 and the first (news) link made me make that "hnff" noise out my nose.
CHAPTER 2 SPOILER FOLLOWS Highlight to read: I must say, the GlaDOS dialog is really quite well-written. She had turned into a serious asshole during her slumber. One gets the feeling that she is harboring an actual grudge just from the sly verbal mistreatment alone. END OF SPOILER 99mx5, I'm with you on the Atari 2600. Granted, the ratio of shitty games to awesome games got pretty high towards the end of its lifetime, but it's interesting to me that, so far as I can remember, that was the last system on which realtime two-player gameplay was really common until, what, the Wii? I did have an NES after the 2600, and then a Sega genesis after that, and that was the end of my console experience. Double Dribble. I just remembered that. Great two-player game. |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 716931)
I will admit to having gone out and spent a fair bit of money on a fancy sound card after ROTT came out.
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 716931)
Anybody remember the Gravis Ultrasound? Yeah, that card was the shit.
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Originally Posted by Reverant
(Post 717023)
Went from PC speaker to Adlib, Sound Blaster, to Adlib Gold, to Sound Blaster Pro, to Sound Blaster AWE32, to Sound Blaster Live. Quite the upgrade one could say.
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Originally Posted by richyvrlimited
(Post 717033)
Creepy, that's the exact sequence of soundcards I had...
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MSI 870A-G54 AM3 AMD 870 SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX AMD Motherboard
HIS Radeon HD 6950 2GB AMD Phenom II X4 840 3.2GHz CORSAIR Vengeance 8GB ~$500 every 4 or 5 years for a new pc. same as a console at release ever 5-8 years. and i have a TOSHIBA Qosmio X505-Q8xx (not sure what model, had a q875 and the 360m video chip died so they are sending me a q890 to q899) |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 717003)
Why is that, prey tell?
just the high relevance for such general search terms. |
I know it is a touch late, but here's a little trivia to answer one of Joe's earlier questions:
POTATO = PO(r)TA(l)T(w)O = Portal Two |
Originally Posted by y8s
(Post 717097)
"No Keyboard and Mouse Support for PS3′s Portal 2"
just the high relevance for such general search terms. :D In all seriousness, though, I didn't realize that mouses were supported by any console games. I'm having a hard time visualizing it, for two reasons. 1: My Xbox is in the living room, and the sitting affordance in that room is a cushy sofa. Cushy sofas are not ideal mousing surfaces. 2: Do you also have a keyboard? Or does the mouse have buttons on top for walk and action commands?
Originally Posted by Reverant
(Post 717023)
Ludicrous gibs (give me that...). I admit I liked God Mode, but I liked Dog Mod even more...
Went from PC speaker to Adlib, Sound Blaster, to Adlib Gold, to Sound Blaster Pro, to Sound Blaster AWE32, to Sound Blaster Live. Quite the upgrade one could say. Soundcard-wise... I never had an Ad-Lib. Although I do remember having a copy of the little flexi-record (yes, RECORD) that they distributed for a while as a demo. My first x86-class computer was a Tandy 1000HX, which had a fairly primitive three-voice sound chip (just three different beeps at once, nothing resembling actual instruments), and while it was a definite step down from the C64, some of the software companies did pretty amazing things with it. Sierra, in particular, comes to mind. After I put together a generic 286 machine, I installed the then-new Game Blaster, which was a C/MS private-labeled by Radio Shack. When the Sound Blaster came out, I bought one immediately. This was before "Creative Labs" existed in the US, and ordering one meant clipping the little 2" ad out of the back of Compute! magazine and mailing it to Brown-Wagh Publishing along with a cashier's check. Then there was the SBPro, then the SB16, to which I later added the Gravis ACE (which was a wavetable-only device; it had a passthrough for the audio out of your main sound card, and the software configuration got a bit weird as games had to know to use the GUS for music but the SB for digitized audio) and after that.... I really don't remember. Good sound cards sort of became a commodity item around that time. I do remember that I hung onto that GUS right up to the point where ISA slots went away completely. By comparison, I've never really splurged on a video card, unless you count the very first VGA card I bought, back when they were just plain expensive in general. |
I remember back in the day I spliced a USB keyboard into my Xbox 1 and was able to type into chat on Phantasy Star Online.
PS2 has mouse and keyboard support for some games. |
The first console with mouse support that I'm aware of was the SNES.
Before you ask; yes, I had a Nintendo brand mouse on my SNES. |
Joe, you bring up a good point about today's games. Most games these days focus on the single player element first then multi-player second. I remember many games having a coop mode. Now some games only have a single-player mode and then multi-player is added on as a patch. I hope P2 becomes a wake up call for coop game play. I still remember the good games playing coop in Quake, R6 Raven Shield, Ghost Recon. R6 Vegas 1, 2 and Serious Sam.
Portal 2 is starting to receive less than stellar reviews by PC gamers due to it being a game ported from the console version like Crysis 2. It sad to see how console games have hurt PC gaming. Games are not modded as much as before by the gaming community and PC games no longer use the extra computing/graphics power of PCs nor do they allow dedicated servers. Good thing Black Ops will have mod tools released soon. $15 for a map pack? No thanks. As for sound cards don't forget the Aureal 3D. It was the one that completed with Sound Blaster back in the day. Too bad they were toppled like 3Dfx. |
Originally Posted by 99mx5
(Post 717243)
Most games these days focus on the single player element first then multi-player second.
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Originally Posted by rmcelwee
(Post 717393)
Most games have an XBox Live component (where they can charge a monthly fee) (...) when you cannot access XBox Live it is a major kink in the chain.
As I said earlier, I'm not really much of a "gamer" anymore, but it's nice to be able to pop online and explore Portal 2's co-op mode without having to subscribe to a monthly service. |
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