They need to put an LED in the cap to make it light up cool as hell.
"Jones Soda Limited Edition Peanut Butter and Jelly (4pk)"
http://www.jonessoda.com/li...
Did I just win the internets?
Your a funny guy, a few extra blades of grass... Try higher resolution, higher frame rates, better anti-aliasing, just about better everything. It would probably cost a little more than my $1300 PC. Probably around $1800-2000 for a single monitor setup to max the game.
Which really isn't that crazy for a high performance gaming PC.
@xPiffGaming
lol. You forgot the Fallout , Elder Scrolls, and Battlefield games. They also launch about as broken...
I'll get it on PC, at least if it's got a crapload of glitches/bugs like Unity, I'll at least have a semi-playable framerate in comparison to the Xbox One and PS4.
I'm not digging on the consoles or beating my elite PC gamer chest. Just simply pointing out that PC gamers with decent cards had better frame rates than the consoles did at the games launch.
There most certainly are! They just arent used in non-server PCs typically because it's a lot more cost effective to have one cpu with multiple cores, not to mention a lot less expensive.
https://www.asus.com/us/Mot...
I don't think people here think modding is a right, they think it's bullshit to ban people for modding resources for offline play. Games with that policy are typically "always online" games such as MMO's.
Yes, because I don't have GTAV on my JTAG 360 with a custom trainer that allows me to change and spawn almost anything.
BTW, I bought the special edition when it came out. So I guess I'm riding the proverbial grey fence on this one. I bought it, and pirated it...
@HeavenlySnipes
What's your point? Consoles don't get game mods because they are so locked down. If anything they are playing the online on consoles, not the single player. For the most part, the only reason people still play GTAIV on PC is because of mods.
GTAV is fantastic until you've beaten the story and played it for a while. Then it gets boring. Just like Skyrim.
I buy the Total War games specifically just to play them with ...
@imalwaysright
Well said.
Statistics is often an educated guess based on scaling up from a smaller sample size. Sometimes they are accurate, and sometimes they are way off.
Awesome. Thanks a lot man.
Anyone want to invite me to the preview program? I dont know anyone with an Xbox One that can send me an invitation :(
It will be Nintendos next console.
http://www.extremetech.com/...
They are nice. I'm not super impressed though. Over on a specific sites forums where Xbox 360 pirates sail the high seas, there exists a thread where over 100 character models with different, or no costumers (Yes, there are naked models. Even for some of the guys...) exists for Ultra Street Fighter IV.
@ABizzel1
All good points. While HBO Go isn't selling any Xbox Ones, it will most likely become a factor when purchasing a console next year. Particularly because HBO is going to offer a streaming only service at a low cost. Finally... and people like to watch that Premium TV lol.
I'm not saying it will be any sole purchasers reason, but it will play at least a minor role in some peoples decisions.
Is there 1080p footage? All I see is 720p and it's so blurry on my 1080p monitor I can't see the game for crap.
@yarbie1000
"The Post-Frame Rate game world"
Weren't we already headed this way with G-Sync and Free Sync? I'm all for GPU optimization but those two technologies themselves render low FPS a non-issue.
All the recently released Nvidia graphics cards are already capable of DX12. You won't need an update with a new GPU to take advantage of DX12.
http://www.extremetech.com/...
You can fix screen tearing by enabling adaptive v-sync (Half refresh rate) for the game in the Nvidia Control Panel. It may limit the game to 30FPS, but no more screen tearing.
Strangely I've ran into barely any texture pop-in and the only stuttering I get is during cinematic scenes. (I haven't tried with the new patch yet) That's with a 2GB GTX 770 and a Core i5 4670K.
Sounds like they need to hire some HBO writers to come up with plots for their future games.