Computer games.

Obviously I won't be touching the online mode. So it worries me not.

Super hyped for the actual game. Reckon they'll finally do a remastered Redemption before this too. On PS4 I mean. And maybe a PC version for you lot with rigs and all that.

Not coming to PC apparently. Tits. Hate buying stuff on PS4.

JAiLpDo.png
 

Im not massively into games,but i loved RDR the current GTAs I can take or leave,good storylines but just didnt have the fun element of San Andreas
 
If I could have picked one game, anywhere, that simply did not need multiplayer, it'd be RDR.

Just can't help themselves can they? It'll be crap too, like GTA Online but with horses.

Could have put the development time they're putting into to this pointless addon into the main game, but no - money talks.


Red dead redemptions multiplayer was one of the best I've ever played.
 

New PC tomorrow - i7 6800k and 2x GTX 1080s.

Trying to future proof as much as poss, because when I've built PCs and cut corners on things like GPUs, within two years it seems to start chugging, especially with After Effects, Premiere Pro etc.
 

Can't afford to be spending too much on my games outside of bday/xmas so I stalk them. Been stalking Littlebigplanet3 and Tomb Raider Defintive Edition for a couple of months. Within a week I own both. PS4 share buddy bought LBP3 for about $8 in a flash sale at the weekend so I get that for free and I've just bought Tomb Raider on the PSN for $7.49

Actually really pleased.
 
New PC tomorrow - i7 6800k and 2x GTX 1080s.

Trying to future proof as much as poss, because when I've built PCs and cut corners on things like GPUs, within two years it seems to start chugging, especially with After Effects, Premiere Pro etc.

I just finally got my desktop going last month. i5-6600k and a GTX 580.

Thats right, an old, dilapidated GTX 580.

I like it though.

Also, what is your reasoning for the 6800k, as from the looks of it, its gaming performance isn't worth the extra money over a 6700k or even my 6600k??

Unless you are encoding and rendering and stuff, where the two extra cores and Broadwell's architecture and features come into play.

*Edit* Meh, you answered the question, but for some reason, I didn't comprehend it when I first read it.
 
I just finally got my desktop going last month. i5-6600k and a GTX 580.

Thats right, an old, dilapidated GTX 580.

I like it though.

Also, what is your reasoning for the 6800k, as from the looks of it, its gaming performance isn't worth the extra money over a 6700k or even my 6600k??

Unless you are encoding and rendering and stuff, where the two extra cores and Broadwell's architecture and features come into play.

*Edit* Meh, you answered the question, but for some reason, I didn't comprehend it when I first read it.

Aye, bought primarily as a work machine, gaming second. Meets both ends that way. I think the SLI 1080s more than make up for the less optimal gaming CPU when gaming anyway.

Went for an 480GB SSD for the OS and to put the performance intensive games on as well, with the 2TB standard hard drive for everything else.

Think it's a good rig. Should be for the price anyway; I'm a bit outdated on my knowledge these days so maybe missed a trick, but hoping not.
 
Aye, bought primarily as a work machine, gaming second. Meets both ends that way. I think the SLI 1080s more than make up for the less optimal gaming CPU when gaming anyway.

Went for an 480GB SSD for the OS and to put the performance intensive games on as well, with the 2TB standard hard drive for everything else.

Think it's a good rig. Should be for the price anyway; I'm a bit outdated on my knowledge these days so maybe missed a trick, but hoping not.
My upgrade path in the near future will be:

another 8Gb RAM > SSD > Graphics Card
 
My upgrade path in the near future will be:

another 8Gb RAM > SSD > Graphics Card

Fair do. Assume you're on 8GB now, as you don't need to go beyond 16GB - for most practical purposes anyway.

SSDs are incredible. Have one on this machine - the difference it makes to boot start up from traditional hard drives is night and day.

I generally don't upgrade machines, as I basically am never sure whether I can! For example, reason I'm getting new PC is that my GTX770 is dying (increasing crash frequency when rendering), but I have no clue whether my motherboard, power supply etc. can support a top end GPU these days.

Most I've ever done upgrade wise is go 8GB to 16GB RAM, as I remembered when buying the MOBO that I could.
 

Welcome

Join Grand Old Team to get involved in the Everton discussion. Signing up is quick, easy, and completely free.

Shop

Back
Top