System Requirements
MINIMUM SYSTEM REQUIRED:
Windows® XP, x64 or 2000 with latest service pack installed; DirectX® 9.0c (August Edition) or higher; Pentium® 4 1.7 GHz or equivalent processor; 512 MB of RAM or more; 64 MB GeForce™ 4 Ti or Radeon® 9000 video card; Monitor that can display in 4:3 aspect ratio; 5.0 GB free Hard Drive Space for installation; Additional hard drive space for a swap file and saved game files; 4x CD-ROM drive; 16-bit DirectX® 9.0 compliant sound card with support for EAX™ 2.0; Broadband or LAN connection for multiplayer games; Mouse; Keyboard
RECOMMENDED HARDWARE:
Pentium® 4 3.0 GHz or equivalent processor; 1 GB RAM; A 256 MB Radeon® 9800 Pro or GeForce™ FX 5900 or equivalent supported DirectX® 9 compliant video card with hardware T&L and pixel shader 2.0 support; Sound Blaster® X-Fi™ series sound card
SUPPORTED CHIPSETS:
ATI™ Radeon® 9000 Series, Radeon® 9500 Series, Radeon® 9600 Series, Radeon® 9700 Series, Radeon® 9800 Series, Radeon® X600 Series, Radeon® X700 Series, Radeon® X800 Series, Radeon® X850 Series
NVIDIA® GeForce™ 4 Ti series, GeForce™ FX 5900 series, 6600 series, 6800 series, 7800 series
what 6 series are you planning on getting?Xycron said:K, goodThen i'll be getting some crappy G6.
Modoman said:i have a 7800gt and can max fear, save for soft shadows. as far as it being the most graphically demanding... not in my case. quake 4 - ultra settings, 16xaa, 1080x768 with vertical sync on (eliminate the awful tearing) destroys my system.
Xycron said:what are the main differences between the geforce 6 and 7 series? any new technology? does any game, currently actlly RECUIRE a 7?
Xycron said:Prabally a 6200, or maybe a 6600, but definatly not a 6800.
I saw it a few days ago for $115 on newegg.TheChef said:$150 can get you a 6600GT, maybe even less, and I'm sure its worth the extra if you plan on gaming.
Modoman said:v-sync synchronizes the fps and the monitors refresh rate. if you are pushing 60 fps but your refresh rate is 75 for example, you will get tearing when the 2 are out of sync, unless you reduce your refresh rate to 60 or enable v-sync. but v-sync can rob a lot of fps :\
same difference. it works both ways, more fps & less hz, or more hz and less fps. the KEY is, OUT OF SYNCceewi1 said:I think V-synch works the other way - if your refresh rate is 60 and your graphics card is giving 75 fps, your graphics card will start drawing the next frame before the previous one has been displayed. V-synch will force it to wait.
Turning V-synch on can also reduce your framerate even if your not hitting your monitor's limit. To get reduce the tearing without v-synch either increase your monitor's refresh rate (if possible) or turn up your graphics settings
From neoseeker.com:
Frame rates will appear higher with vsync off but the amount of information displayed is limited by your monitor in that instance. A monitor with an 85 Hz refresh rate will only display 85 frames per second even if the videocard is rendering 400 frames a second. The visual quality may decline as a result also because some frames could be skipped as a result of excess rendering so the interpolation between the first frame and the next frame displayed could be off resulting in 'tearing' or jerkiness.