So do you think they will not be even more p***ed off if the game wont run at all? I certainly would be.
How many people have a dual-core (not an i3) and are running a GPU faster than R9 270X? The next level up is HD7950/7970/GTX680/960. Who honestly buys $200+ GPUs and a $65 dual core after doing an ounce of research?
G4400 =
$65
i3 6100 =
$125
Core i5-6400 =
$185
Let me put it another way. Who spends $600 on an all new rig that's
outdated on day 1, when spending $660 (i3 6100) or $720 (i5-6400) ensures a system that's actually useful and can be upgraded down the line?
Let me put it a 3rd way. If a gamer is on a budget and
really, really wants to have a good gaming PC, you go into the used market. You don't buy overpriced dual-core and i3 turds with underpowerd and overpriced $150-200 GTX750Ti/GTX950/960 videocards. I also do not want to hear anything about PSU requirements that "force" people to buy these weak cards out of necessity.
XFX 550W is regularly on sale for $27 USD:
http://slickdeals.net/newsearch.php...earcharea=deals&searchin=first&sort=relevance
Used PC market has stellar deals for budget gamers.
$750 CAD (~ $590 USD) for this entire rig:
-
i7 2700K @ 4.2GHz Quad Core CPU
- ASUS P8Z68-V PRO Motherboard SLI/XFire Support USB 3.0
- 8GB G.Skill 1600 MHz DDR3 RAM
-
XFX R9 290X 4GB Black OC Edition DD
- 120 GB Kingston HyperX SSD
- Corsair 600T Mid Tower Case
- Cooler Master Evo 212 CPU Cooler
- Cooler Master Elite 550W V2
http://www.kijiji.ca/v-desktop-comp...sd/1157554235?enableSearchNavigationFlag=true
This system that costs <$600 USD but will SMOKE 90%+ of all Steam gaming PCs.
This is AnandTech
Technical Forums, not BestBuy or Apple forums. People come here to learn and with knowledge learn how to spend their $ wisely on PC upgrades. Anyone tight on $ is more than welcome to get advice from 100s-1000s of members here that'll help find awesome deals.
Even JaysTwoCents admitted that before he got into YouTube and didn't have the budget for high-end PC parts, he frequently purchased used components.
I can totally understand people in 3rd world countries with a limited online used parts market, perhaps unavailable/poor Internet connection, small local market which limits the # of people who resell parts, high tariffs that cause large mark-ups on electronics not having the choices we have, almost no opportunity to make more than $150-300 a month. But the people living in US/Canada complaining that a game may not run well on a dual-core in 2016? It's actually sad reading this type of stuff.
Literally, US is a country where minimum wage in some states is $15/USD per hour.
There is actually a YouTube channel where a guy put together a $350 PC from the time PS4/XB1 launched with the goal to show that a budget gaming rig with a 1st generation Quad Core i5 750/760 + GTX760 2GB is going to last the entirety of a PS4 generation for 1080p gaming, with minor upgrades (such as RAM) along the way:
https://www.youtube.com/user/jermgaming
Finally, there is such concept as Total Cost of Ownership.
I buy an Intel i5 6600K CPU for $240 and use it for 5 years, reselling it for $80. It cost me $170 / 5 = $34 a year for a high-end gaming CPU. Cannot afford $34 a year on CPU but can buy $60 launch software? If someone is complaining that their $65 CPU cannot run a $60 game in 2016, maybe they shouldn't be gaming on a PC. This leads to another question -- who in the world has $ to buy a $60 US game launch date but can only afford a $65 CPU? Sounds like this person pirates PC games too....?
It took an overclocked HD7970Ghz
$500 US card in June of 2012 to come close to 60 fps at 1080p 4xAA in Crysis 1, a game released in November 200
7.
This would be similar if it took a $500 US GPU and a $400 i7 in 2021 to hit 60 fps in Mirror's Edge Catalyst at 1080p.
I am sure a mid-range rig with a $200-250 Polaris 10 and an a $185 i5-6400 will play this game well in June. Today's gaming demands are nothing like the old days.