seanbarkley wrote:My experience tells me that if your card is one of those that are insided the recommended ones doesn't mean that you can max the game out AT ALL. There are lots of examples, but I remember that GTA IV recommended was a 512 Mb GPU, and I can't max it out or even play at continuous 60 fps with my 780 OC.
Recommended CPU requirements are ridiculously high too for a sports game.
xKrNMBoYx wrote:@StormsWarning - The VRAM in System Requirements usually mean the dedicated VRAM embedded/attached to your actual video card. The shared memory includes your actual RAM in case the game needs more VRAM. But normal RAM is not as fast as the VRAM so it's not the same as having enough Dedicated VRAM.
@seanbarkley - I think requiring a i7 on anything except crazy FPS or crazy Open-World RPG games is a bit high. They probably choose a high requirement CPU so they don't get complaints when someone complains a "Phenom II X4 or i5" didn't have smooth gameplay even though it was recommended.
@crazy_me_87 - No need to be confused. Games can be designed to use DX10 and DX11. This is up to the developers and most games have not done this from my memory. For example Dragon Age II can be run in DX11 mode or in DX9/10 mode. Hopefully allowing DX10 did not hold back the game from being even better on DX11
Troyork wrote:seanbarkley wrote:My experience tells me that if your card is one of those that are insided the recommended ones doesn't mean that you can max the game out AT ALL. There are lots of examples, but I remember that GTA IV recommended was a 512 Mb GPU, and I can't max it out or even play at continuous 60 fps with my 780 OC.
Recommended CPU requirements are ridiculously high too for a sports game.
GTA IV is a REALLY BAD EXAMPLE when talking PC benchmarks. That's one of the worst porting jobs in recent history lol.
Dommy73 wrote:PS anybody think that in MyCareer we'll be able to buy MyPhones and MyCubes and then get tons of MyBills?
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