• Re: Strategy on the Decline

    From Rin Stowleigh@21:1/5 to All on Sat May 25 18:17:14 2024
    Supposedly the sweet spot for game buyers is between 18 and 38.

    Think about how that demographic has changed from 30-40 years ago.

    The pandemic put a serious dent in the level of learning / brain
    stimulation for school kids while that was going on, and even before
    that their brains were being manipulated and diluted by social media algorithms. To them, gaming is pokemon on the phone, not
    Civilization.

    Then you have the folks 38+ who have played so many shit games they
    paid for and regretted, then subsequently were flooded with free games
    that they can't find time to play, that sitting at the computer for
    hours in a typical turn based strategy is the last thing they're
    interested in wasting their life doing.

    There is probably a nostalgia audience for strategy games, but they
    aren't likely to spend a lot of money or be eager early adopters.

    When team based tactical first person multiplayer shooters emerged and
    I started playing with organized teams, I realized that the level of
    planning, overall strategy, and tactics that were available in that
    genre not only satisfied but overshadowed everything I originally
    liked about strategy games like Civilization, or Empire on the Atari
    ST, Ancient art of War and AAoW at Sea, etc. There was just no
    comparison.

    But consoles changed the multiplayer shooter landscape. And speaking
    of consoles, that in itself probably didn't help the fate of the
    strategy genre, which is typically not as well suited to a game
    controller as a mouse/keyboard.

    Today, a lot of the kids who would have gotten interested or even
    addicted to strategy games are probably too distracted by teen girls
    shaking their tits and ass on tik tok to notice much of anything else.

    In my work I'm often in contact with the current generation of
    software developers, and most of them are brain dead compared to their equivalents of 30 years ago.

    Growing up Googling "How Do I Do This Or That" has not exactly
    exercised their brains, and upcoming AI capabilities isn't going to
    improve that situation at all.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lane Larson@21:1/5 to Rin Stowleigh on Sat May 25 18:28:59 2024
    Rin Stowleigh wrote:

    Supposedly the sweet spot for game buyers is between 18 and 38.

    Think about how that demographic has changed from 30-40 years ago.

    The pandemic put a serious dent in the level of learning / brain
    stimulation for school kids while that was going on, and even before
    that their brains were being manipulated and diluted by social media algorithms. To them, gaming is pokemon on the phone, not
    Civilization.

    Then you have the folks 38+ who have played so many shit games they
    paid for and regretted, then subsequently were flooded with free games
    that they can't find time to play, that sitting at the computer for
    hours in a typical turn based strategy is the last thing they're
    interested in wasting their life doing.

    There is probably a nostalgia audience for strategy games, but they
    aren't likely to spend a lot of money or be eager early adopters.

    When team based tactical first person multiplayer shooters emerged and
    I started playing with organized teams, I realized that the level of planning, overall strategy, and tactics that were available in that
    genre not only satisfied but overshadowed everything I originally
    liked about strategy games like Civilization, or Empire on the Atari
    ST, Ancient art of War and AAoW at Sea, etc. There was just no
    comparison.

    But consoles changed the multiplayer shooter landscape. And speaking
    of consoles, that in itself probably didn't help the fate of the
    strategy genre, which is typically not as well suited to a game
    controller as a mouse/keyboard.

    Today, a lot of the kids who would have gotten interested or even
    addicted to strategy games are probably too distracted by teen girls
    shaking their tits and ass on tik tok to notice much of anything else.

    That shows that "teen girls" are just as desperate as any guy. I can
    load up facebook any time and watch five different half-nude girls shake
    it. Girls just want to dance.

    Another theory about strategy games is Civ VI was a flop. I can't even
    play it without shutting down my computer afterwards because of the
    keyboard lights. Also, too much emphasis on cultural advancements.
    It's not transparent; you can't see under the hood to know if your
    culture shit is helping. I don't think Civ VI or Dawn of War II were
    very good games. I would go all the way back to Civ IV for my strategy
    fix, except unfortunately Achievements aren't implemented on Steam. It
    feels like playing with zero rewards. The fact is, my computer, which I
    bought last year, is getting old. Magic:TG Arena overheated my system
    and funky artifacts started showing up, like mana costs cascading all
    over the screen. I'd rather play Balatro, which is cunningly coded,
    released in 2024 yet still no need to engage the fan. I can wear my
    headphones but when it gets that hot things fuck up. Balatro shows that
    some developers care about overheating, something that is caused by a
    great deal of electricity passing through the computer whether it be for graphics or fancy Creative Labs Soundblasting. I realize that as far as Alienwares go this is a low end computer, but I shouldn't have to pay
    twice the price just to get in the door. I can't really imagine that
    all my peers are throwing down $3200 for their gaming machines. What I
    did recently was to order a PS4 with Elden Ring and Dark Souls III. My
    good mood dropped a bit when I saw that many other people were buying
    PS4 cooling units in combination with this. If consoles are overheating
    too, where are we going? Sorry if it seems like I prate on this
    subject, but I want my voice to be heard. I don't want to play some
    shit if it requires maximum fan speed. I know they can do it, but kids
    these days fall over backwards for eye candy. I'm content with the
    graphics in Dominions V, but I loaded it up and my friend said, "let's
    play something with better graphics." If you play enough games like I
    have, I think you will realize that graphics are only a means to an end.
    I'm here for strategic/role-playing/action content and I just don't understand the focus on graphics without bound. I've heard it said, "in
    a few years the graphics will look real." Who gives a shit? The
    graphics look real enough to me in World of Warcraft cut scenes. That
    was fifteen yrs ago.

    It's a horror story. Say I come up with $3200 to buy the top end
    Alienware. I bet I'd still have to deal with lots of overheating. What
    I'd like to do is break my computer over someone's head and get in the
    news, where it says that my computer was too hot and drove me mad. I
    was appalled when I got this one home and Pathfinder: Wrath of the
    Righteous was used to fry an egg. When is this shit going to stop? I
    bought too many computers in the 90s just to keep up. My parents lost
    some faith in me when I liquidated my stock portfolio to buy just
    another computer. And it's still happening!

    In retrospect, my advice to computer owners is to avoid incremental
    upgrades. Save some money to get the top end computer or to build one
    instead of numerous minor upgrades. I know I'm saving for that $3200
    machine.

    One good thing I can say about my Alienware is that games don't slow
    down. It keeps trucking through them even when it's on fire.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lane Larson@21:1/5 to Rin Stowleigh on Sat May 25 18:39:08 2024
    Rin Stowleigh wrote:

    Growing up Googling "How Do I Do This Or That" has not exactly
    exercised their brains, and upcoming AI capabilities isn't going to
    improve that situation at all.

    I don't share your lack of faith in AI. "The Terminator" was fiction.
    When I see that shit on Facebook about "Here's Sarah Conner watching you
    make friends with AI," I'd like to pound the poster on the head with a
    Lucerne hammer. "The Terminator" was fiction AND horror. AI is mostly
    a friend without judgment. The more friends you have the merrier. I
    say "mostly" because I can detect a subtle aloofness in Siri on the
    iPhone. For example, she will ignore most questions that cross her
    boundaries.

    As soon as I get done here, I'm going to train my AI on this post to see
    if it opens any eyes and/or mini-guns. My job is in robotics, such as
    the motion of a robotic arm.
    --
    Sarah Conner?

    SC: Yes.

    <busts open door>

    <Fires a shot>
    <lowers weapon>
    <fires three more shots>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rin Stowleigh@21:1/5 to lnlarson@stoat.inhoin.edu on Sat May 25 21:03:27 2024
    On Sat, 25 May 2024 18:39:08 -0500, Lane Larson
    <lnlarson@stoat.inhoin.edu> wrote:

    Rin Stowleigh wrote:

    Growing up Googling "How Do I Do This Or That" has not exactly
    exercised their brains, and upcoming AI capabilities isn't going to
    improve that situation at all.

    I don't share your lack of faith in AI.

    I think you misunderstood my post... it wasn't a lack of faith in the capabilities of AI I was expressing.

    It was my lack of faith in the evolution of the human intellect to not
    become increasingly reliant on it as the solution to everything.

    In my line of work I regularly deal with some pretty complex software engineering conundrums. I see the Gen Zs and the Millenials
    frantically Googling or looking for solutions on Chat GPT to save the
    day every time the going gets rough, because it's easier to to that
    than it is to solution the entire problem using nothing but their
    brain.

    For someone like me who started developing software in 1980 when
    search engines to tough problems were not an option, it was the lack
    of creature comfort that helped develop a problem-solver's brain.

    Thanks to search engines, the need to develop a problem-solver's brain
    has deferred to basic clerical typing skills. Bringing that idea into
    AI -- whenever "prompt engineering" is described as a skill of the
    future in an AI driven world, you can kind of see the writing on the
    wall.

    I've heard some say AI will do to critical thinking what the
    calculator did to math skills and what spell and grammar checkers did
    to the need to teach basic literacy.

    But it's actually much worse than that, because AI only ever looks
    back, it cannot look forward. And the thinking ability of generations
    to come will be step-locked in same.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JAB@21:1/5 to Spalls Hurgenson on Sun May 26 09:10:41 2024
    On 25/05/2024 20:32, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
    Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
    any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
    the genre as you used to be?

    I'm certainly less interested in strategy titles than I used to be
    probably because my gaming wants have changed more from a need to be
    challenged to a more 'relaxed' gaming experience. A simple example would
    be what I want out of a CRPG. I just don't have a great deal of interest
    in what's a good character build, how to use skills together for maximum
    effect or even combat tactics. I'm there for the story.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Steven Thomsen-Jones@21:1/5 to JAB on Sun May 26 12:18:28 2024
    On 5/26/24 10:10, JAB wrote:
    On 25/05/2024 20:32, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
    Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
    any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
    the genre as you used to be?

    I'm certainly less interested in strategy titles than I used to be
    probably because my gaming wants have changed more from a need to be challenged to a more 'relaxed' gaming experience. A simple example would
    be what I want out of a CRPG. I just don't have a great deal of interest
    in what's a good character build, how to use skills together for maximum effect or even combat tactics. I'm there for the story.





    Yeah, I'm definitely more of a story guy in general. I steer well away
    from things that need me to spend lots of time to 'git gud' and will
    happily plough hours of my time into more chill experiences. Heck, I
    have 10K hours of play on Idle Champions, admittedly most of that was
    AFK! ;D
    For strategy games though, I think I still play as much as I always have
    (I'm 50 now) but I absolutely focus more of that time on a few games
    that really grab me than jumping around lots of different games.
    Stellaris, City Skylines and Dwarf Fortress haven't left my installed
    games list since I started playing each of them, some across both PC and
    XBOX. Of course that doesn't make the devs much money, which is probably
    why so many turn to DLC focused game support, which I can't really argue
    with.
    --
    Steve
    IM - @countstex:matrix.org
    Mastodon - https://dice.camp/@countstex
    Bookwyrm - https://books.theunseen.city/user/Steven

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mike S.@21:1/5 to spallshurgenson@gmail.com on Sun May 26 14:37:01 2024
    On Sat, 25 May 2024 15:32:22 -0400, Spalls Hurgenson <spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:

    Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
    any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
    the genre as you used to be?

    I think I still play strategy games about as much as I used to but
    that isn't very much. RPGs are my genre of choice. But I do always
    have one Civ game, Colonization, Heroes 3 and MOO and MOM installed.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From candycanearter07@21:1/5 to JAB on Sun May 26 21:30:04 2024
    JAB <noway@nochance.com> wrote at 08:10 this Sunday (GMT):
    On 25/05/2024 20:32, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
    Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
    any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
    the genre as you used to be?

    I'm certainly less interested in strategy titles than I used to be
    probably because my gaming wants have changed more from a need to be challenged to a more 'relaxed' gaming experience. A simple example would
    be what I want out of a CRPG. I just don't have a great deal of interest
    in what's a good character build, how to use skills together for maximum effect or even combat tactics. I'm there for the story.


    Agreed, and I suck at most strat games heh ^^
    --
    user <candycane> is generated from /dev/urandom

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lane Larson@21:1/5 to Mike S. on Sun May 26 22:29:33 2024
    Mike S. wrote:
    On Sat, 25 May 2024 15:32:22 -0400, Spalls Hurgenson <spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:

    Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
    any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
    the genre as you used to be?

    I think I still play strategy games about as much as I used to but
    that isn't very much. RPGs are my genre of choice. But I do always
    have one Civ game, Colonization, Heroes 3 and MOO and MOM installed.

    I'd like to see Disciples go to Disciples IV. Disciples III isn't too
    bad but they have about a zillion pixels spinning animation whenever you
    visit your castle. What's good about Disciples is that it is like an
    RPG with several parties. I got into it at first because of the
    similarities to Heroes. I won the Undead campaign in Disciples II. My
    Ghosts are unstoppable.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Steven Thomsen-Jones@21:1/5 to Lane Larson on Mon May 27 12:28:05 2024
    On 5/27/24 05:29, Lane Larson wrote:
    Mike S. wrote:
    On Sat, 25 May 2024 15:32:22 -0400, Spalls Hurgenson
    <spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:

    Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
    any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
    the genre as you used to be?

    I think I still play strategy games about as much as I used to but
    that isn't very much. RPGs are my genre of choice. But I do always
    have one Civ game, Colonization, Heroes 3 and MOO and MOM installed.

    I'd like to see Disciples go to Disciples IV.  Disciples III isn't too
    bad but they have about a zillion pixels spinning animation whenever you visit your castle.  What's good about Disciples is that it is like an
    RPG with several parties.  I got into it at first because of the similarities to Heroes.  I won the Undead campaign in Disciples II.  My Ghosts are unstoppable.

    This game series seems to have passed me by, but reading up a bit on it
    it looks rather like something I'd enjoy. Would it still be worth
    jumping in to II or III?
    My computer is 10+ years old so I'm used to playing older titles, so
    from that point of view it wouldn't be an issue.

    --
    Steve
    IM - @countstex:matrix.org
    Mastodon - https://dice.camp/@countstex
    Bookwyrm - https://books.theunseen.city/user/Steven

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lane Larson@21:1/5 to Steven Thomsen-Jones on Mon May 27 08:00:41 2024
    Steven Thomsen-Jones wrote:
    On 5/27/24 05:29, Lane Larson wrote:
    Mike S. wrote:
    On Sat, 25 May 2024 15:32:22 -0400, Spalls Hurgenson
    <spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:

    Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
    any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
    the genre as you used to be?

    I think I still play strategy games about as much as I used to but
    that isn't very much. RPGs are my genre of choice. But I do always
    have one Civ game, Colonization, Heroes 3 and MOO and MOM installed.

    I'd like to see Disciples go to Disciples IV.  Disciples III isn't too
    bad but they have about a zillion pixels spinning animation whenever
    you visit your castle.  What's good about Disciples is that it is like
    an RPG with several parties.  I got into it at first because of the
    similarities to Heroes.  I won the Undead campaign in Disciples II.
    My Ghosts are unstoppable.

    This game series seems to have passed me by, but reading up a bit on it
    it looks rather like something I'd enjoy. Would it still be worth
    jumping in to II or III?
    My computer is 10+ years old so I'm used to playing older titles, so
    from that point of view it wouldn't be an issue.

    If you can get II to work, it's really good. It has much depth when
    paired with the Gallean's Return expansion. I got the feeling that III
    was a failure commercially. The formula was changed to add a level of micromanagement in unit positioning which wasn't done very well.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Justisaur@21:1/5 to Lane Larson on Tue May 28 08:08:59 2024
    On 5/25/2024 4:28 PM, Lane Larson wrote:

    It's a horror story.  Say I come up with $3200 to buy the top end Alienware.  I bet I'd still have to deal with lots of overheating.  What I'd like to do is break my computer over someone's head and get in the
    news, where it says that my computer was too hot and drove me mad.  I
    was appalled when I got this one home and Pathfinder: Wrath of the
    Righteous was used to fry an egg.  When is this shit going to stop?  I bought too many computers in the 90s just to keep up.  My parents lost
    some faith in me when I liquidated my stock portfolio to buy just
    another computer.  And it's still happening!

    Don't buy pre-made gaming computers. You end up paying 2x (or 3x if
    you're talking $3200!) what you would for a better optimized system with cooling that works. I didn't even try that hard, I probably spent a bit
    over $1000 for my current one which is a year old, and that's only
    because I bought a video card very close to their highest overpriced
    value. I haven't had any problems playing anything and no issues with overheating. All I did for cooling was bought a $32 tower fan and a
    case (years ago) big enough to fit it in.

    If you don't want to assemble the computer yourself I believe many
    places will do so for a much smaller $ than buying from Alienware. I and
    others here, and other sites like tomshardware will be more than happy
    to help figure out a decent setup.

    You can also put some blame on the programmers, Baldur's Gate 3 is the
    only thing that's really put any stress on my computer, it's all on the
    CPU and it's because it was very badly optimized at release, which I
    understand has been subsequently fixed, but I haven't returned to try it
    out again yet. I don't play at high resolutions though, 1920x1024 for
    me, and have a dynamic refresh rate monitor.

    CPUs have been hit harder in recent years as games have been optimized
    for consoles, which typically have different architecture for that and
    it doesn't work well when moved to PC.

    --
    -Justisaur

    ø-ø
    (\_/)\
    `-'\ `--.___,
    ¶¬'\( ,_.-'
    \\
    ^'

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Xocyll@21:1/5 to All on Wed May 29 03:36:58 2024
    Justisaur <justisaur@yahoo.com> looked up from reading the entrails of
    the porn spammer to utter "The Augury is good, the signs say:

    On 5/25/2024 4:28 PM, Lane Larson wrote:

    It's a horror story.  Say I come up with $3200 to buy the top end
    Alienware.  I bet I'd still have to deal with lots of overheating.  What
    I'd like to do is break my computer over someone's head and get in the
    news, where it says that my computer was too hot and drove me mad.  I
    was appalled when I got this one home and Pathfinder: Wrath of the
    Righteous was used to fry an egg.  When is this shit going to stop?  I
    bought too many computers in the 90s just to keep up.  My parents lost
    some faith in me when I liquidated my stock portfolio to buy just
    another computer.  And it's still happening!

    Don't buy pre-made gaming computers. You end up paying 2x (or 3x if
    you're talking $3200!) what you would for a better optimized system with >cooling that works.

    This depends.
    A local computer shop offers prebuilts that are not bad value at all.
    The caveat is they have almost no upgrade path except swapping out the
    video card, since they tend to have lower end motherboards and have all
    the ram slots filled already.

    You are correct if it's brand name junk like Alienware or any other big
    name, you get charged $500-1000 just to have their name on it.

    Xocyll

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Xocyll@21:1/5 to All on Wed May 29 21:30:51 2024
    Spalls Hurgenson <spallshurgenson@gmail.com> looked up from reading the entrails of the porn spammer to utter "The Augury is good, the signs
    say:

    On Wed, 29 May 2024 03:36:58 -0400, Xocyll <Xocyll@gmx.com> wrote:

    Justisaur <justisaur@yahoo.com> looked up from reading the entrails of
    the porn spammer to utter "The Augury is good, the signs say:

    On 5/25/2024 4:28 PM, Lane Larson wrote:

    It's a horror story.  Say I come up with $3200 to buy the top end
    Alienware.  I bet I'd still have to deal with lots of overheating.  What >>>> I'd like to do is break my computer over someone's head and get in the >>>> news, where it says that my computer was too hot and drove me mad.  I
    was appalled when I got this one home and Pathfinder: Wrath of the
    Righteous was used to fry an egg.  When is this shit going to stop?  I >>>> bought too many computers in the 90s just to keep up.  My parents lost >>>> some faith in me when I liquidated my stock portfolio to buy just
    another computer.  And it's still happening!

    Don't buy pre-made gaming computers. You end up paying 2x (or 3x if >>>you're talking $3200!) what you would for a better optimized system with >>>cooling that works.

    This depends.
    A local computer shop offers prebuilts that are not bad value at all.
    The caveat is they have almost no upgrade path except swapping out the >>video card, since they tend to have lower end motherboards and have all
    the ram slots filled already.

    You are correct if it's brand name junk like Alienware or any other big >>name, you get charged $500-1000 just to have their name on it.

    I agree.

    My last two PCs were pre-builts. I could have -and in the past /have/-
    built my own computers, but it's just easier to have somebody else do
    all the work for me. Will that motherboard fit in the case? Is the
    cooling sufficient? Etc.

    I've still never bought a prebuilt.
    The ones I looked at were cheaper than what I paid building it myself,
    but they had a lower end motherboard, with only 32gb of ram and all
    slots filled, also only a 500gb SSD, and it wasn't clear if another
    could be added or spinning rust. And some random case.

    In the end I built it myself with a better board, 64gb of ram and room
    for 64 more, 2tb SSD (and room for another SSD) and 16tb of spinning
    rust, a corsair high-flow case (if it were turned off, the fans spin up
    high on boot only, then quiet right down, usually inaudible during
    gameplay even with 2 games running, plus browsers, etc.

    But of course, the price was an issue. EVERYONE knows prebuilts are
    more expensive. But you know what? Not necessarily.

    Oh sure, there are some boutique builders. Falcon Northwest's prices
    are insane (about double anybody else) and throw in a lot unnecessary >'extras' (like being delivered in a heavy wooden crate). But I've
    priced the stuff from some builders, then went out and searched for
    the exact same price from retailers, and you know what? The builders
    were competitive; sometimes a little more, and sometimes even a little
    less than what I would pay if I bought all the components separately.

    [note: that is, of course, assuming you buy from RELIABLE retailers.

    I buy brand name parts from a local computer store that's about a block
    from me. Been buying there since about '93 (first purchases were
    putting together a 386 with 4MB of ram and a 1M video card, forget the
    HD size, both floppy sizes 3.5 and 5.25, case and 14" monitor.)

    Yes, I could find the components for a lot cheaper if I relied on EBay
    or from sold by some six-letter company on Amazon Marketplace or from >AliExpress. But then you're never sure you're going to get what you're >promised, and that's just not the sort of hassle I'm interested in. So
    in my pricing experiment, I stuck to more reliable - and admittedly
    more expensive - sources. YMMV may vary depending on what level of
    risk you're happy with.]

    I have never ever bought components online, but I do realize not
    everyone has a good computer store near them to go physical shopping in.

    And if you're not the sort who enjoys tinkering with hardware -mixing
    and matching components, figuring out how many amps your PSU /really/
    needs, deciding what thermal paste is Right For You- then the value of >prebuilts absolutely skyrockets.

    I don't exactly enjoy it, but have been saying since 1993, that building
    a computer is about as hard as playing with LEGO.

    PSU more is always better, and I tend to just leave the CPU cooling at
    the default - whatever the company shipped with it.
    But I don't overclock so ... I can see why some might want to play
    around with that.

    Old computer's Phenom II still running on the default heat sink/fan that shipped with it, and it's been on constantly for around a decade now (I
    turn off my computer(s) when I'm upgrading a part (vid usually, but
    sometimes adding HD,) or when I move.

    It's still going strong with a dual boot system XP/7, neither of which
    has ever been reinstalled - it's amazing how stable a system can be once
    you turn off all the useless cruft MS insists on installing by default.

    Xocyll

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JAB@21:1/5 to Spalls Hurgenson on Thu May 30 08:44:53 2024
    On 29/05/2024 14:59, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
    This depends.
    A local computer shop offers prebuilts that are not bad value at all.
    The caveat is they have almost no upgrade path except swapping out the
    video card, since they tend to have lower end motherboards and have all
    the ram slots filled already.

    You are correct if it's brand name junk like Alienware or any other big
    name, you get charged $500-1000 just to have their name on it.
    I agree.

    My last two PCs were pre-builts. I could have -and in the past/have/-
    built my own computers, but it's just easier to have somebody else do
    all the work for me. Will that motherboard fit in the case? Is the
    cooling sufficient? Etc.

    But of course, the price was an issue. EVERYONE knows prebuilts are
    more expensive. But you know what? Not necessarily.

    I haven't bought a pre-built for over twenty years but I think the price margins between them and DIY just aren't the same as before and also now there's lot's of companies that will allow you to pick pretty much the
    parts you want. That was previously one of the big draws for me.

    I did cheat a little bit with my last upgrade though as I had RAM + CPU pre-installed because installing the CPU is the one bit I never liked doing.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dimensional Traveler@21:1/5 to Xocyll on Thu May 30 08:00:06 2024
    On 5/29/2024 6:30 PM, Xocyll wrote:

    It's still going strong with a dual boot system XP/7, neither of which
    has ever been reinstalled - it's amazing how stable a system can be once
    you turn off all the useless cruft MS insists on installing by default.

    Well that's because all the useless cruft MS insists on installing by
    default is there to muck up the OS to encourage you to upgrade the their
    next OS where they've "fixed" those issues. Mostly by replacing the
    older useless cruft with new and improved useless cruft to continue the
    cycle.

    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Justisaur@21:1/5 to JAB on Thu May 30 07:15:36 2024
    On 5/30/2024 12:44 AM, JAB wrote:
    On 29/05/2024 14:59, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
    This depends.
    A local computer shop offers prebuilts that are not bad value at all.
    The caveat is they have almost no upgrade path except swapping out the
    video card, since they tend to have lower end motherboards and have all
    the ram slots filled already.

    You are correct if it's brand name junk like Alienware or any other big
    name, you get charged $500-1000 just to have their name on it.
    I agree.

    My last two PCs were pre-builts. I could have -and in the past/have/-
    built my own computers, but it's just easier to have somebody else do
    all the work for me. Will that motherboard fit in the case? Is the
    cooling sufficient? Etc.

    But of course, the price was an issue. EVERYONE knows prebuilts are
    more expensive. But you know what? Not necessarily.

    I haven't bought a pre-built for over twenty years but I think the price margins between them and DIY just aren't the same as before and also now there's lot's of companies that will allow you to pick pretty much the
    parts you want. That was previously one of the big draws for me.

    I did cheat a little bit with my last upgrade though as I had RAM + CPU pre-installed because installing the CPU is the one bit I never liked
    doing.


    Technically the CPU was never difficult since I've been doing it.
    Really that was the crap heatsink and fan they came with with horrible
    plastic spear like things that are supposed to twist into place but
    never seem to requiring such force that you end up bending the
    motherboard, that and futzing with the thermal paste.

    The now available cheap tower heatsink and fan was easy to install and
    had a perfect thermal paste square already applied to it. (except they
    sent two of the wrong bracket the first time, they sent me the right one
    though fairly quickly, but it did delay me putting the computer together
    a few days - I had bought on amazon.) The current cheap tower heatsinks
    are outperfomring water cooling as well. I'm really amazed at how great
    these things are and how cheap compared to previous solutions.

    To Lane, if you're having heat issues, getting a tower heatsink & fan if
    you don't have one and have the room in your case I'd strongly suggest
    trying that out, or even changing the case to accommodate one, it's just
    that good. It could be the video card though, I try to check and avoid
    higher voltage cards and get one that uses less power so it's not as
    prone to overheating. Or could just be bad flow in the case. You
    probably want to run something that monitors heat like "Core Temp" so
    you can see what is overheating.

    --
    -Justisaur

    ø-ø
    (\_/)\
    `-'\ `--.___,
    ¶¬'\( ,_.-'
    \\
    ^'

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JAB@21:1/5 to Justisaur on Thu May 30 19:27:04 2024
    On 30/05/2024 15:15, Justisaur wrote:
    Technically the CPU was never difficult since I've been doing it. Really
    that was the crap heatsink and fan they came with with horrible plastic
    spear like things that are supposed to twist into place but never seem
    to requiring such force that you end up bending the motherboard, that
    and futzing with the thermal paste.

    Technically it's best to have a heat sink for your CPU :-)

    I do understand what you mean though although I always found it the
    fiddly bit especially as I have to end up doing the install on the floor
    unless I what to clear my modelling desk.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Anssi Saari@21:1/5 to Justisaur on Thu May 30 16:14:18 2024
    Justisaur <justisaur@yahoo.com> writes:

    CPUs have been hit harder in recent years as games have been optimized
    for consoles, which typically have different architecture for that and
    it doesn't work well when moved to PC.

    I don't know how? Both Microsoft and Sony went to x86-64 in previous gen already (Xbone and PS4). Nintendo is Arm based but I AFAIK Nintendo
    games don't come to PCs that often.

    I feel I'm almost always GPU bound since I got a Gsync-compatible
    monitor which goes up to 165 fps.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dimensional Traveler@21:1/5 to Anssi Saari on Fri May 31 07:50:11 2024
    On 5/30/2024 6:14 AM, Anssi Saari wrote:
    Justisaur <justisaur@yahoo.com> writes:

    CPUs have been hit harder in recent years as games have been optimized
    for consoles, which typically have different architecture for that and
    it doesn't work well when moved to PC.

    I don't know how? Both Microsoft and Sony went to x86-64 in previous gen already (Xbone and PS4). Nintendo is Arm based but I AFAIK Nintendo
    games don't come to PCs that often.

    I feel I'm almost always GPU bound since I got a Gsync-compatible
    monitor which goes up to 165 fps.

    Just because it can go up to 165 doesn't mean you have to force software
    to do so.

    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lane Larson@21:1/5 to JAB on Sat Jun 1 16:59:55 2024
    JAB wrote:
    On 29/05/2024 14:59, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
    This depends.
    A local computer shop offers prebuilts that are not bad value at all.
    The caveat is they have almost no upgrade path except swapping out the
    video card, since they tend to have lower end motherboards and have all
    the ram slots filled already.

    You are correct if it's brand name junk like Alienware or any other big
    name, you get charged $500-1000 just to have their name on it.
    I agree.

    My last two PCs were pre-builts. I could have -and in the past/have/-
    built my own computers, but it's just easier to have somebody else do
    all the work for me. Will that motherboard fit in the case? Is the
    cooling sufficient? Etc.

    But of course, the price was an issue. EVERYONE knows prebuilts are
    more expensive. But you know what? Not necessarily.

    I haven't bought a pre-built for over twenty years but I think the price margins between them and DIY just aren't the same as before and also now there's lot's of companies that will allow you to pick pretty much the
    parts you want. That was previously one of the big draws for me.

    I did cheat a little bit with my last upgrade though as I had RAM + CPU pre-installed because installing the CPU is the one bit I never liked
    doing.

    As far as strategy goes, I would have to say Dawn of War II is better
    than I had represented it as. Thinking through what I own, if I were to
    play a strategy game right now, I would choose it. Of other games, I'm patiently waiting for Starcraft III. For some unusual reason Starcraft
    II is corrupted from install on my machine and haven't had any luck over
    a number of installs.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Anssi Saari@21:1/5 to Dimensional Traveler on Mon Jun 3 15:49:37 2024
    Dimensional Traveler <dtravel@sonic.net> writes:

    Just because it can go up to 165 doesn't mean you have to force
    software to do so.

    You're right. In fact the usual advice with Gsync-compatible seems to be
    to limit to three below the max, so 162 for me :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)