- Dec 25, 2008
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I saw this video today showing the Batman Arkham City game with vs without physx.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trq6B4anzjM&feature=youtu.be&hd=1
It looks like if you don't use physx there will be no physics effects at all looking at this video. Everything I see done there with physx I've seen in other games that don't use it.
Also, this is obviously not everything in the game, but having recently played the BF3 beta; I don't see anything here I haven't seen done on the CPU.
Is this a wise choice to mandate physx in order to have physics effects in a game ? Especially considering the rather large performance hit gpu physx has historically had versus cpu implemented physics.
I'll assume there will be the option to run this on the CPU, in the past though this was ridiculously intensive (Mafia 2) bordering on unplayable. I do wonder though as in this comparison it says with GTX card vs without GTX card ? The video is obviously to help EVGA sell cards of course, perhaps there will be a CPU option.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trq6B4anzjM&feature=youtu.be&hd=1
It looks like if you don't use physx there will be no physics effects at all looking at this video. Everything I see done there with physx I've seen in other games that don't use it.
Also, this is obviously not everything in the game, but having recently played the BF3 beta; I don't see anything here I haven't seen done on the CPU.
Is this a wise choice to mandate physx in order to have physics effects in a game ? Especially considering the rather large performance hit gpu physx has historically had versus cpu implemented physics.
I'll assume there will be the option to run this on the CPU, in the past though this was ridiculously intensive (Mafia 2) bordering on unplayable. I do wonder though as in this comparison it says with GTX card vs without GTX card ? The video is obviously to help EVGA sell cards of course, perhaps there will be a CPU option.