Some of the newer console emulation can be pretty taxing, Wii / Gamecube comes to mind.
Even on a rocking computer, it can be glitchy. -Tom On Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 12:00 PM, Omar Rassi <[email protected]> wrote: > Most of us in the IT field know that even though gigabit ethernet has a > bandwidth 1000 Mb/s or that SATA3 has bandwidth of 600 Mb/s, you will never > reach those numbers in real world operation. Does the same hold true about > gaming and FPS? I found the following article at on Wired: > > http://www.wired.com/reviews/2013/11/high-low-gaming-pcs/?cid=14209594 > > I know that beyond 60 FPS its very difficult for the human eye to > distinguish better quality and that greater than 30 FPS is where games are > considered playable. Wired brought up a good point that most monitors can > only display 60 FPS max (high end monitors beyond 60Hz are excluded from > that generality). So I ask what are the benefits of a multi-thousand dollar > gaming rig besides bragging rights? > > The topic here is centered around benefits to the owner of said computer, > not community projects like Folding@home or Seti@home. Do not discuss > Bitcoin mining is also a given considering the power of a $5000 rig and how > much it has already been discussed in the past, lets get creative here. > > Thanks, > > Omar > > _______________________________________________ > Discuss mailing list > [email protected] > https://synhak.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss >
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