Computer games.

Always remember F-Zero giving me massive headaches! Those were the days.

Mode-7 games apart from Mario Kart irritated me. Never got the F-Zero love in personally.

EDIT:

I then actually looked up Mode-7 games...

Mode 7 games include the titles F-Zero, Terranigma, Pilotwings, Yoshi's Safari, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles IV: Turtles in Time, Super Castlevania IV, Secret of Mana, Secret of Evermore, Final Fantasy IV, Final Fantasy V, Final Fantasy VI, Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars, Dino City, Super Mario Kart, Super Mario World, Super Metroid, Super Star Wars, Chrono Trigger, ActRaiser, Exhaust Heat, Skyblazer, 7th Saga, Mega Man 7, Kirby Super Star, Axelay, and The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past.

So let me rephrase - no Mode-7 game whatsoever beyond F-Zero irritated me.








'sake.
 

I guess they were showing the non-fight parts for comedy effect but it just looked farcical then you find out a single fight takes literally days to complete.

The problem is that it looks like Final Fantasy 13 rather than Final Fantasy 6, and that's the wrong direction to take.

There's nothing wrong with a JRPG being strange, and indeed they should be strange as they're 'fantastical' games (FF6 had a guy suplex a ghost train) - but they shouldn't just be outright stupid. The script elements on show in that video were horrid, and although a comedy segment, that reaction from Wood to that massive boss 'fight' was telling.

I've long suspected 15 is being massively overhyped. It'll get defended all over the shop by fan boys of the title before it's even released, but at this point I'd be amazed if it's any good.

I think it'll be identical to 13 - woeful for the first six or so hours, open up a bit and be average afterwards, but by that point you won't care anymore. But we'll see - definitely not a day one purchase for me though.
 
The 1070 performance beats that of the GTX 980 and equals the 980Ti. The 1080 takes the lunch money and laughs in their face. It gives Titan X levels of performance for WAY cheaper.

But price/performance, the 1070 is the way to go. Like I said, 980Ti performance, "reasonable" price.

Oh, and regarding the CPU, don't know when you are looking to build, but the new process, Kaby Lake is being released early next year, so the 7000 range will be out soon.

Is it worth waiting until January? Some reviews insists the gains are quite marginal. Normally I would go and buy the parts tomorrow. Also isn't it the same socket?

So I can assemble it during the week. I just use it for gaming; not for benchmarking or such. I just want to play ultra settings for a year or 2.

Thanks for your help btw
 
Is it worth waiting until January? Some reviews insists the gains are quite marginal. Normally I would go and buy the parts tomorrow. Also isn't it the same socket?

So I can assemble it during the week. I just use it for gaming; not for benchmarking or such. I just want to play ultra settings for a year or 2.

Thanks for your help btw
If you are building now, sack waiting. Build it now. The gains are small, as it is part of the same family, just an optimization, nothing radical (even though Intel have biffed the tick-tock, this would be the tock if that where the case, with Skylake being the tick)
 

If you are building now, sack waiting. Build it now. The gains are small, as it is part of the same family, just an optimization, nothing radical (even though Intel have biffed the tick-tock, this would be the tock if that where the case, with Skylake being the tick)

Thanks.

Have to say though building computers is one of my most favourite pastimes. The excitement of the buying of the parts. The moment when you first turn on the computer (will it work?). The first tweaks. Better than Christmas. The first game you play on your new gear... Magic.

I am 27 now, been building them since I was 11.

A lot has changed; hard to believe now that there used to be a time when ATI (now AMD) sometimes had the best card. ATM, it's really disappointing.
 
Mode-7 games apart from Mario Kart irritated me. Never got the F-Zero love in personally.

EDIT:

I then actually looked up Mode-7 games...

Mode 7 games include the titles F-Zero, Terranigma, Pilotwings, Yoshi's Safari, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles IV: Turtles in Time, Super Castlevania IV, Secret of Mana, Secret of Evermore, Final Fantasy IV, Final Fantasy V, Final Fantasy VI, Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars, Dino City, Super Mario Kart, Super Mario World, Super Metroid, Super Star Wars, Chrono Trigger, ActRaiser, Exhaust Heat, Skyblazer, 7th Saga, Mega Man 7, Kirby Super Star, Axelay, and The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past.

So let me rephrase - no Mode-7 game whatsoever beyond F-Zero irritated me.








'sake.

Weird looking at that list, then realising they made one of my fave recent games, Frozen Synapse (and it's sequel)!
 
Thanks.

Have to say though building computers is one of my most favourite pastimes. The excitement of the buying of the parts. The moment when you first turn on the computer (will it work?). The first tweaks. Better than Christmas. The first game you play on your new gear... Magic.

I am 27 now, been building them since I was 11.

A lot has changed; hard to believe now that there used to be a time when ATI (now AMD) sometimes had the best card. ATM, it's really disappointing.
After Pentium 4, AMD picked up the game with Athlon X2 and created a line that blew Intel out of the water for both price and performance. Then Intel hit back with their 'Core' line and AMD haven't caught back up since.
 

Well, bin the trophies then!

They are nothing but narcissistic anyway, a way to say 'look at me'.

Just get on with having fun.

I've ever really got the whole trophy/achievements thing ever since they were introduced.

Never needed them on F-Zero on the SNES did you?!

To be honest i haven't been too bothered about trophies much. I was more into gamer score on the xbox, so the trophies i never really get into. That being said the main draw to skyrim trophies is that i can get them all, and mainly through just playing through the game as normal. Oblivion was the first game i 100% on the 360 which was a rare occurence to be honest as i never played too much out my way to do it.

The PS4 mods are more cheats rather than actual mods, so as i plan to do the enchanting glitch anyway, i may just go ahead with them. Only difference between doing it the normal way and the mod way is that i will be very much richer in the process, and just let me play the DLC as normal.

that and the fact i haven't even looked at the trophy list once since buying skyrim haha
 
The problem is that it looks like Final Fantasy 13 rather than Final Fantasy 6, and that's the wrong direction to take.

psyched for the FFVII remake myself...hope they don't frak it up. Also hope I can select jap voices with subs. American voices just don't fit that world.


Have to say though building computers is one of my most favourite pastimes. The excitement of the buying of the parts. The moment when you first turn on the computer (will it work?). The first tweaks. Better than Christmas. The first game you play on your new gear... Magic.

nice mate. mine are cheapo and a few years old: currently a GTX570 with non-i dualcore. As I play older games it's fine, also runs newer games. My projector is only 720p so no need to dial the settings to 1920x1080, allows me to max most graphic settings.

SSD is critical for open world games, so a fat one in there, then the 1TB secondary drive for the other games.

Happy with it so far, reckon in the next year or so I'll get the GTX970 plus a 2nd-gen i7 quad...should be nicely affordable by then.


Mario Kart, FZero and RnR Racing...still my 3 favourite racing games to this day

Rollcage (the first one) is still my number one...rediscovered it again and it's the most fun in a game, proper challenging but once mastered it's exhilerating. Even her indoors is well into it and able to win races at the highest difficulty.


To be honest i haven't been too bothered about trophies much.

can't stand trophy notifications...i was aghast when the PS3 wouldn't let you turn them off (they do now...finally). Imagine defeating a melancholy giant in the HD remaster of Shadow of Colossus only to get an obnoxious PING! achievement for it. Took me right out of that world.

Steam thankfully lets you turn off the overlay so don't get bothered by it there.

was never much of a completist anyway, more an immersist :cheers:
 
psyched for the FFVII remake myself...hope they don't frak it up. Also hope I can select jap voices with subs. American voices just don't fit that world.




nice mate. mine are cheapo and a few years old: currently a GTX570 with non-i dualcore. As I play older games it's fine, also runs newer games. My projector is only 720p so no need to dial the settings to 1920x1080, allows me to max most graphic settings.

SSD is critical for open world games, so a fat one in there, then the 1TB secondary drive for the other games.

Happy with it so far, reckon in the next year or so I'll get the GTX970 plus a 2nd-gen i7 quad...should be nicely affordable by then.




Rollcage (the first one) is still my number one...rediscovered it again and it's the most fun in a game, proper challenging but once mastered it's exhilerating. Even her indoors is well into it and able to win races at the highest difficulty.




can't stand trophy notifications...i was aghast when the PS3 wouldn't let you turn them off (they do now...finally). Imagine defeating a melancholy giant in the HD remaster of Shadow of Colossus only to get an obnoxious PING! achievement for it. Took me right out of that world.

Steam thankfully lets you turn off the overlay so don't get bothered by it there.

was never much of a completist anyway, more an immersist :cheers:

Aye i am the same. I don't get that much time to play skyrim as it is so i am considering the drop in cheats that the mods seems to bring. I need to have a proper read through them but they seem to be just chests filled with gold and stuff added to the game rather than outright cheating. The fact i have already spent 100 hours in the past playing and finishing the game has got me thinking for the sake of some trophies (which i may swap back over to xbox next year) i can speed up the gameplay and at least when i am doing everything i don't have to worry about trivial things. Plus i would imagine it would mean it is less likeley to break the game as the 'cheats' aren't as exploitative as the glitch anyway haha
 
any long-term Xboxers here? Agree with Trials, tho' GTA, Orange Box and KOTOR were favourite PC titles for me...can't imagine playing a FPS with a joypad...isn't that with auto-aim? Also on PC, Bioshock got boring for me.

Red Dead Redemption, Lost Odyssey, Splinter Cell and Shenmue II are probably notable by their absence on this list.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

the 15 greatest Xbox games of all time

The Xbox brand is 15 years old today, so here are 15 of the most important titles from the original machine to the Xbox One era.


It was 15 years ago this week that Microsoft launched its first foray into the console business. Arriving in the US on 15 November 2001, the original Xbox was designed to compete directly against Sony’s all-consuming PlayStation 2. Offering a powerful graphics processor as well as a built-in hard drive and a dedicated online gaming service, it was basically a gaming PC wrestled into the chassis of games machine – thereby setting the architectural trend that would dominate the industry going forward.

Next came the Xbox 360, the dominant online multiplayer console of its era, introducing the idea of achievements and a gamer score mechanic that encouraged players to get the absolute most out of every title they purchased. And now we’re in the Xbox One era, the industrial and architectural design decisions of that original machine still guiding Microsoft’s approach to console development – albeit in a much more powerful form.

For this list we’ve concentrated on Xbox exclusives, or games that were better, earlier or more acclaimed on Xbox. Naturally, there are scandalous omissions and oversights – but that’s where you come in, right? Tell us your own personal Xbox favourites in the comments section.


15. Braid
Jonathan Blow’s strange allegorical platformer helped kickstart the modern independent gaming scene, showcasing Xbox Live as a venue for experimental projects as well as deathmatches.


14. Trials HD
With its super-exaggerated physics and fiendishly designed obstacle courses, Trials provided a tense test of motoring skill, made all the more compelling by its global scoreboard that let you easily compare your best times with those of your friends.


13. Ninja Gaiden Black
Featuring merciless difficulty levels and screen-spraying gore, Team Ninja’s hack-n-slash adventure thrilled Xbox owners looking for a truly challenging, truly modern brawler. The Black edition added new enemies, modes and skill levels, making it – for many – the definitive edition.


12. Forza Horizon 3
Although the Forza Motorsport series has been a mainstay of the Xbox experience for several years, the latest Horizon spin-off, with its astonishing visuals, accessible handling and vast array of racing styles, is arguably the ultimate contemporary driving game.


11. Geometry Wars: Retro Evolved 2
Originally included as an extra feature in Project Gotham Racing 2, the popularity of this intense, super-stylish twin-stick shooter encouraged its creator Stephen Cakebread to create a fully-featured version. Like Trials HD, Geometry Wars captured the score-chasing wonder years of arcade gaming.


10. Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas
While Grand Theft Auto: Vice City was a PlayStation 2 exclusive, San Andreas brought Rockstar’s incendiary series to Microsoft’s machine – and in some style. The compelling story, huge environment and vast array of activities set a benchmark for the gangster adventure genre that took many years to surpass.


9. The Orange Box
Consisting of Half-life 2 (and its episodic successors), Team Fortress 2 and Portal, Valve’s incredible orange package squeezed some of the most seminal moments in first-person game design history into one package. Who knew back then that it would be the last we’d see of Gordon Freeman? *sniff*


8. Project Gotham Racing
The spiritual successor to seminal Dreamcast title Metropolis Street Racer, Project Gotham saw Liverpool developer Bizarre Creations craft another sleek urban driving sim where stylish execution was as important as raw speed. Alongside Halo, this showy series truly symbolised the Xbox era.


7. Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare
In which Infinity Ward practically invented the modern military shooter, with its thrilling campaign and exhaustive multiplayer set-up. Bringing role-playing game customisation and character progression into the online arena was a design masterstroke, ensuring even mediocre players were drawn into weeks of Team Deathmatch action.


6. Fable II
Arguably, Lionhead reached its creative peak with the second title in this idiosyncratic role-playing adventure series. A beautiful environment, richly drawn characters and exciting story came together perfectly with a quaint sideline in romance, relationships and offbeat humour, making this a distinctly British rendering of the genre.


5. Star Wars: Knights of the Republic
Directed by Casey Hudson who would go on to lead development on Mass Effect, this role-playing adventure, set thousands of years before the events of the Star Wars movies, really built the foundations of Bioware’s approach to game design. An unforgettable fusion of narrative, character, combat, dialogue and, of course, a pretty good movie license.


4. Bioshock
Featuring a failed Art Deco utopia, bizarre diving suit-clad monsters and a story that twisted and looped around the player’s assumptions, Bioshock introduced a new kind of action adventure game, loaded with meaning, style and adult themes. One of the most important – and widely discussed – narrative games ever devised.


3. Mass Effect 2
While the opening title in Bioware’s acclaimed interactive space opera introduced the characters and scenario that millions would come to love, it was the second adventure that cemented the cast, structure and design. An astonishingly assured blend of genres, experiences and disparate narrative forces into one cogent and moving experience.


2. Gears of War 2
The story of macho space warriors and their chainsaw guns really hit its destructive stride in this second instalment. Marcus Fenix and co are forced to take the battle to the Locust underworld, leading to brilliant set-piece battles, wonderfully apocalyptic settings (Epic Games famously referred to its art style as ‘destroyed beauty’) and expert use of the game’s cover-focused combat system. Multiplayer was re-engineered too, to include the hugely influential Horde mode.


1. Halo: Combat Evolved
Although GoldenEye was the first game to successfully bring the dynamics of the first-person shooter to games machines, Halo turned the whole concept of the console shooter into a distinct and credible artform. Excellent controls, brilliant structure, an array of weapons, smart enemies, a cogent, engrossing universe, Bungie’s game was revolutionary. And of course, it is the game that even now is most synonymous with Xbox – the attitude, aims and technology of the console series are all illustrated right here in this science fiction epic. Halo is Xbox and Xbox is Halo.
 
nice mate. mine are cheapo and a few years old: currently a GTX570 with non-i dualcore. As I play older games it's fine, also runs newer games. My projector is only 720p so no need to dial the settings to 1920x1080, allows me to max most graphic settings.

SSD is critical for open world games, so a fat one in there, then the 1TB secondary drive for the other games.

Happy with it so far, reckon in the next year or so I'll get the GTX970 plus a 2nd-gen i7 quad...should be nicely affordable by then.

Thanks.

I also own a GTX570 still a very decent card. If you play on your projector, don't you have to change the light bulb often and isn't that expensive? - I've never used a projector before.


any long-term Xboxers here? Agree with Trials, tho' GTA, Orange Box and KOTOR were favourite PC titles for me...can't imagine playing a FPS with a joypad...isn't that with auto-aim? Also on PC, Bioshock got boring for me.

Red Dead Redemption, Lost Odyssey, Splinter Cell and Shenmue II are probably notable by their absence on this list.

From time to time I play stuff on the XBOX, but I also prefer playing most games on the computer, especially FPS - hate aiming via a controller (not always auto-aim- for instance Metal Gear Solid).

Don't understand why you would want to play Kotor on the XBOX. No decent modding support. Plus no high quality audio and such.

The only games that I really prefer playing on consoles are sports games. Like FIFA, Madden ...

Annoyingly enough they still make you buy consoles for the exclusive titles. I bought a PS for GTA (don't like the waiting), Ni No Kuni,... You play one game with them and then they start gathering dust. Like the WII U; I bought it for Mariokart. Only game I ever played on it.

It surprises me that Jade Empire didn't make the list. Red Dead Redemption is ofc boss
 

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