01 December 2010

Need for Speed Woes

While it's an incredibly biased thing to say that PC gamers get shafted more often than not, and a nasty generalization at that, here's a quick note regarding Criterion's Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit, published by EA.

PC users with multi-core CPUs, largely quad and six core flavors, reported crashes and general buggery that made the game unplayable upon unboxing.

Aside from EA's lukewarm response that Criterion, being the developer, is the go-to guy for fixing issues, exacerbated by players' already jaded views of just how much EA cares about its PC audience, Criterion did issue a patch to address several of the issues. [How many times did I say 'issues?' Geez.]

One of the awesome things about next-gen games and multi-cored processors is, well, that extra processing power. All that beefy goodness that you splurged on to toss under the hood and vibrate your panties. Criterion's elegant solution to the NFS:HP multi-core crash? Hamstring user's PCs so that only a single core is utilized for gameplay.

Bring up ye olde Task Manager, and check out the affinity that NFS11.exe is set to: CPU 0.

This strikes me as...odd. Lame, even. In fact, the kind of fuckery that gamers, justly or otherwise, tend to hate developers for when they rely heavily on the more business-friendly model of porting console versions rather than parallel development.

Your milage may vary depending on how many cores you're rockin', but I posit this:

Criterion. Seriously. For those of us with V-Sixes, yer gonna make us only use a single cylinder because our shit-hot blocks won't fit in your and EA's lemon?

01 November 2010

Da Goods

This aged box, circa 2008, upgraded early 2010, is running:

CoolerMaster HAF932
Silverstone 1200W ridiculous amounts of power supply
EVGA nVidia nForce 680i SLI
Zalman 110mm CPU Cooler
Intel Q6600 2.4GHz
4G OCZ Reaper X HPC DDR2, recognized @ 2560MB
nVidia GeForce 9800 GTX
nVidia GeForce 9800 GTX+
DirectX 10.0
Integrated HD Sound
Win Vista/7 Ultimate
Win XP SP3
Win 98 (!!)
Cyber Acoustics 2.1 sound sys
ViewSonic 22" 1680 x 1050 (with silly integrated webcam!)
Logitech VX Nano wireless mouse
Ideazon Reaper maming mouse
Ideazon Merc Stealth gaming keyboard
Dell keyboard of awesome, L100
Wacom Bamboo Fun, first gen, black
Rosewill multi-card reader and floppy
A sadly unused Zalman MFC2, due to PCI slots being eaten by ginormous GeForce beasts

Downsides:
- No overclocking
- Two optical drives, no BluRay
- Oldschool DDR2!

Upgrades:
Wavering between a downsized mini-monster, in perhaps an Antec Skeleton, or sticking with the monstrous theme and upgrading the mobo to an Asus board for an AMD chipset, and an ATI C.O.U.S.; reinstalling my soundcard, or springing for a Fatal1ty; upgrading the ol' wired gaming mouse; joystick and pedal setup; wheel, pedal + clutch and stick setup; new monitor with higher native resolution and itty bitty response time, and no ghosting; etcetera.