High quality:
http://www.youtube.com/watc...
For Very High settings, yes, you'll need some very powerful videocards for a stable 30+ FPS at HD resolutions, but you can get away with High settings, which still looks better than pretty much any game out there, on as cheap a card as the 9600GT ($110).
10. Yes.
9. No. This feature is unneccessary.
8. Absolutely no.
7. Depends on the game. I think every game should have the ability to crouch, but being able to prone could possibly break level design in some spots.
6. No! We do not need every game to be the same, and we definitely do not need every game to be realistic.
5. Again, no. This feature belongs in games where the game heavily uses this feature. Squad control would only prove detrimental to a game where ...
Most of these aren't tough. They're tedious.
I remember being super impressed by the screens close to a year ago.
Now, not so much.
God damn, is trolling all you do with your life?
A 9600GT (Palit 9600GT on Newegg for $110) has the best-to-performance ratio. It maxes out the game at 1280x1024 with an average FPS of 60, even more if you disable the soft smoke edges. And the card gives a rather large jump in performance when you plop two in SLI.
I'd rather play Zombie Panic: Source.
Hey, what'dya expect?
It's Ubisoft.
Grenade launcher.
I'm surprised, given Ubisoft's track record with its recent PC titles.
According to IGN, the PC version is the best one.
I think they're bad quality screenshots of the PC version, since there's a PCGH watermark on the images.
Embargo, Crazyglues.
Mark Rein actually said that Unreal Tournament 3 was better looking than Crysis in an interview. >_>
Digital downloads are the same price, and sometimes more expensive, than their retail counterparts because of the publishers. Hopefully that will change soon.
According to what I read, turn-based combat requires some sort of 'points' system. Once you lose your points, you are forced to revert back to real-time combat until you regain your turn-based action points, which I think is done through combat.
The 8800 GTX, which is still high-end, has been out for 1 1/2 years.
Most of the new cards which NVIDIA have put out have simply been refreshes.
Yes, sadly, considering Fallout 1 and 2 were straight up CRPGs.
The water makes me doubt that it's in-game.
It just looks too complex for today's hardware.
Also, high-quality mirror of the video:
http://www.youtube.com/watc...