Originally posted by: Idontcare
Originally posted by: Qbah
Looks similar to what nVidia did to PhysX:
We helped the developer, we gave him money, the game will run at 100% only on our hardware. The features will be artificially blocked so they don't work on other hardware. You want to play it, buy nVidia only.
As sad as it sounds, that's the recent way of "being competitive" for nVidia - and it's actually very anti-competitive. In a normal environment, the hardware should defend itself with pure power and ingenuity and not artificial blocks. But nVidia can't really compete with the new HD58xx cards. The new ATi cards are both faster and have more features. So it's nVidia's way of showing how much "better" they are. Kinda reminds me of their PR BS about a 100$ card being faster than ATi's newest series in PhysX (hardware accelerated physics). True? Sure it is. Total bullshit? Most definitely.
Every respectful gamer should avoid this game not to give the developer and publisher the idea that it's supported. Then again the game sells extremely well (mostly thanks to console numbers, which don't use either PhysX or AA anyway). Also, wasn't Intel doing something similar and got sued for it?
Seriously though what incentive is there for Nvidia to spend money getting AA put into games if it doesn't then enable a product differentiation?
This is one of those cases where people get all emotional about speculating on the motive but they don't really think thru the money and business angle.
Without NV you'd have a game without AA on anyone's hardware. With NV's money (more specifically, with their shareholder's money) they were able to get you AA on their hardware. No harm to AMD, just benefit to NV and NV's customers.
Now lets think about this, logically, for a moment. If for some reason the requirement existed that if AA exists then it must be equally available regardless who paid for its existence then what
justification does NV (or AMD) have to their shareholders for wasting their equity developing gaming features that do not enable product differentiation to the competition...meaning why the heck would NV waste their money in the first place if it isn't going to result in them selling more than enough
additional GPU products to offset the investment?
Without an incentive to invest in developing features that enable product differentiation do you think the decision makers would just willy-nilly throw around the money and waste their shareholder's equity?
If the choice is "no AA on either hardware, or you must pay for AA and enable it on all hardware" guess where NV's shareholders are expecting NV's decision makers to come down on that decision tree?
The good news is the game is no less functional on your AMD gear than it otherwise would have been, its just got more features if you have NV gear. If you apply some weird set of emotionally constrained/bounded laws of rationality on the situation then the result is that you'd have fewer features, not more, in the game and you'd get AA for no one unless the developer themselves thought it was worth implementing on their own dime. Not exactly what an enthusiast would want...is it?