The_Patriarch wrote: »Has anyone moved from console to PC?
The_Patriarch wrote: »I've been contemplating moving from Xbox to PC for two reasons. First, I have some friends who play on PC exclusively. Second, console performance, while better than it used to be, is still underwhelming.
But, as you can see from my sig, I have quite a few characters on X1. Beyond that, I have a lot invested on console: achievements, trial clears, trial gear, gold, etc. I wish ZOS could port our accounts to a different platform; I'd even pay for that.
Do you think it's worth switching? If you used to be on console and switched, do you regret it?
The_Patriarch wrote: »@SirPaws
I can always count on you to provide such a thorough, heartfelt reply.
I appreciate that you did not candy-coat the transition, as some might, and I also appreciate your understanding of where I am in terms of processing this decision.
Finally, I appreciate your kind words about me. It was my pleasure to promote ESO on the Tamriel Vault, to correct some of the misconceptions about the game to the most strident of single-player gamers, and to advise the newer players on how to enjoy the game to its fullest. It's friends like you guys that are motivating me to switch.

The_Patriarch wrote: »I have the opportunity to purchase an MSI gaming laptop from someone I know (he doesn't have the time to game anymore).
2.8 GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ, 16GB ram, 500GB SSD + 1TB HHD, GTX 1060 6GB.
I assume this should be sufficient to run ESO. The GTX 1060 worries me as this is a mid-tier GPU and it might get behind-the-times sooner than later. I am also concerned about the 2.8 GHz CPU. However, I hope this set-up should be somewhat future-proof (3-5 years). What do you think?
I have the opportunity to upgrade from this to a stronger rig (but more than I'd like to pay), but if this would be okay for now, then I might go for it.
The_Patriarch wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »I have the opportunity to purchase an MSI gaming laptop from someone I know (he doesn't have the time to game anymore).
2.8 GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ, 16GB ram, 500GB SSD + 1TB HHD, GTX 1060 6GB.
I assume this should be sufficient to run ESO. The GTX 1060 worries me as this is a mid-tier GPU and it might get behind-the-times sooner than later. I am also concerned about the 2.8 GHz CPU. However, I hope this set-up should be somewhat future-proof (3-5 years). What do you think?
I have the opportunity to upgrade from this to a stronger rig (but more than I'd like to pay), but if this would be okay for now, then I might go for it.
Any thoughts on this set-up?
FlyingSwan wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »I have the opportunity to purchase an MSI gaming laptop from someone I know (he doesn't have the time to game anymore).
2.8 GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ, 16GB ram, 500GB SSD + 1TB HHD, GTX 1060 6GB.
I assume this should be sufficient to run ESO. The GTX 1060 worries me as this is a mid-tier GPU and it might get behind-the-times sooner than later. I am also concerned about the 2.8 GHz CPU. However, I hope this set-up should be somewhat future-proof (3-5 years). What do you think?
I have the opportunity to upgrade from this to a stronger rig (but more than I'd like to pay), but if this would be okay for now, then I might go for it.
Any thoughts on this set-up?
Should be fine, CPU turbo at 3.8GHz, which is good as game is primarily CPU bound, a reasonable GPU for a mobile device. I actually have that card in my Dell but never tried to play ESO on it. Might give it a go and let you know how it performs, if you are interested?
The_Patriarch wrote: »I have the opportunity to purchase an MSI gaming laptop from someone I know (he doesn't have the time to game anymore).
2.8 GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ, 16GB ram, 500GB SSD + 1TB HHD, GTX 1060 6GB.
I assume this should be sufficient to run ESO. The GTX 1060 worries me as this is a mid-tier GPU and it might get behind-the-times sooner than later. I am also concerned about the 2.8 GHz CPU. However, I hope this set-up should be somewhat future-proof (3-5 years). What do you think?
I have the opportunity to upgrade from this to a stronger rig (but more than I'd like to pay), but if this would be okay for now, then I might go for it.
The_Patriarch wrote: »I have the opportunity to purchase an MSI gaming laptop from someone I know (he doesn't have the time to game anymore).
2.8 GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ, 16GB ram, 500GB SSD + 1TB HHD, GTX 1060 6GB.
I assume this should be sufficient to run ESO. The GTX 1060 worries me as this is a mid-tier GPU and it might get behind-the-times sooner than later. I am also concerned about the 2.8 GHz CPU. However, I hope this set-up should be somewhat future-proof (3-5 years). What do you think?
I have the opportunity to upgrade from this to a stronger rig (but more than I'd like to pay), but if this would be okay for now, then I might go for it.
Dont worry about the xx60 cards. Those cards have always had the sweet spot of performance over price. And, since the real growth in GPU demand is 4K, you dont have much too worry about in the future. One, your never going to go over 4K, well maybe if you buy a 4K TV, but your going to go a different route for your PC anyway if you do that. You will be gaming on this for years to come.
The_Patriarch wrote: »FlyingSwan wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »I have the opportunity to purchase an MSI gaming laptop from someone I know (he doesn't have the time to game anymore).
2.8 GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ, 16GB ram, 500GB SSD + 1TB HHD, GTX 1060 6GB.
I assume this should be sufficient to run ESO. The GTX 1060 worries me as this is a mid-tier GPU and it might get behind-the-times sooner than later. I am also concerned about the 2.8 GHz CPU. However, I hope this set-up should be somewhat future-proof (3-5 years). What do you think?
I have the opportunity to upgrade from this to a stronger rig (but more than I'd like to pay), but if this would be okay for now, then I might go for it.
Any thoughts on this set-up?
Should be fine, CPU turbo at 3.8GHz, which is good as game is primarily CPU bound, a reasonable GPU for a mobile device. I actually have that card in my Dell but never tried to play ESO on it. Might give it a go and let you know how it performs, if you are interested?
I'd really appreciate it if you did. Thanks!
I have to agree with @SirPaws and he pretty much sums it up.
I too made the switch back in april and it was hard at first. Max CP to cover a few years of CP increase, multiple houses, end game builds, countless hours of gear grinding, so much mounts/costumes, pretty much every motif style. It sucked and for the first couple months honestly i questioned frequently if i was making the right choice.
After playing for the past 5 months though and getting over that what am i doing here hump, i don't regret it. Performance wise PC hands down feels better. First time i went into pvp i was like wow no lag approaching Ash. An approaching zerg didn't lag as much and i just had more fun.
People were more friendly and more then willing the help and the guilds are great. Addons are bomb as far as lorebook hunting, skyshards and the best? time breaches for the psijic line (man do i love that one). I don't use much addons by choice though and i'm ok with that.
If you aren't 100% sure i suggest playing casual until you experience enough to make a decision. If you have your mind set you to go PC you won't regret it.
FlyingSwan wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »I have the opportunity to purchase an MSI gaming laptop from someone I know (he doesn't have the time to game anymore).
2.8 GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ, 16GB ram, 500GB SSD + 1TB HHD, GTX 1060 6GB.
I assume this should be sufficient to run ESO. The GTX 1060 worries me as this is a mid-tier GPU and it might get behind-the-times sooner than later. I am also concerned about the 2.8 GHz CPU. However, I hope this set-up should be somewhat future-proof (3-5 years). What do you think?
I have the opportunity to upgrade from this to a stronger rig (but more than I'd like to pay), but if this would be okay for now, then I might go for it.
Any thoughts on this set-up?
Should be fine, CPU turbo at 3.8GHz, which is good as game is primarily CPU bound, a reasonable GPU for a mobile device. I actually have that card in my Dell but never tried to play ESO on it. Might give it a go and let you know how it performs, if you are interested?
The_Patriarch wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »I have the opportunity to purchase an MSI gaming laptop from someone I know (he doesn't have the time to game anymore).
2.8 GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ, 16GB ram, 500GB SSD + 1TB HHD, GTX 1060 6GB.
I assume this should be sufficient to run ESO. The GTX 1060 worries me as this is a mid-tier GPU and it might get behind-the-times sooner than later. I am also concerned about the 2.8 GHz CPU. However, I hope this set-up should be somewhat future-proof (3-5 years). What do you think?
I have the opportunity to upgrade from this to a stronger rig (but more than I'd like to pay), but if this would be okay for now, then I might go for it.
Dont worry about the xx60 cards. Those cards have always had the sweet spot of performance over price. And, since the real growth in GPU demand is 4K, you dont have much too worry about in the future. One, your never going to go over 4K, well maybe if you buy a 4K TV, but your going to go a different route for your PC anyway if you do that. You will be gaming on this for years to come.
That's great to hear. Thanks, @Nestor ! I might be coming over to PC soon.
FlyingSwan wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »I have the opportunity to purchase an MSI gaming laptop from someone I know (he doesn't have the time to game anymore).
2.8 GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ, 16GB ram, 500GB SSD + 1TB HHD, GTX 1060 6GB.
I assume this should be sufficient to run ESO. The GTX 1060 worries me as this is a mid-tier GPU and it might get behind-the-times sooner than later. I am also concerned about the 2.8 GHz CPU. However, I hope this set-up should be somewhat future-proof (3-5 years). What do you think?
I have the opportunity to upgrade from this to a stronger rig (but more than I'd like to pay), but if this would be okay for now, then I might go for it.
Dont worry about the xx60 cards. Those cards have always had the sweet spot of performance over price. And, since the real growth in GPU demand is 4K, you dont have much too worry about in the future. One, your never going to go over 4K, well maybe if you buy a 4K TV, but your going to go a different route for your PC anyway if you do that. You will be gaming on this for years to come.
That's great to hear. Thanks, @Nestor ! I might be coming over to PC soon.
Just tested on my Dell XPS15 and had 100fps open world dropping to 30-50 in towns. I was running 1080 res (native is 4k), and the GPU is actually a 1050, so you will be fine on that 1060.
The_Patriarch wrote: »FlyingSwan wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »I have the opportunity to purchase an MSI gaming laptop from someone I know (he doesn't have the time to game anymore).
2.8 GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ, 16GB ram, 500GB SSD + 1TB HHD, GTX 1060 6GB.
I assume this should be sufficient to run ESO. The GTX 1060 worries me as this is a mid-tier GPU and it might get behind-the-times sooner than later. I am also concerned about the 2.8 GHz CPU. However, I hope this set-up should be somewhat future-proof (3-5 years). What do you think?
I have the opportunity to upgrade from this to a stronger rig (but more than I'd like to pay), but if this would be okay for now, then I might go for it.
Dont worry about the xx60 cards. Those cards have always had the sweet spot of performance over price. And, since the real growth in GPU demand is 4K, you dont have much too worry about in the future. One, your never going to go over 4K, well maybe if you buy a 4K TV, but your going to go a different route for your PC anyway if you do that. You will be gaming on this for years to come.
That's great to hear. Thanks, @Nestor ! I might be coming over to PC soon.
Just tested on my Dell XPS15 and had 100fps open world dropping to 30-50 in towns. I was running 1080 res (native is 4k), and the GPU is actually a 1050, so you will be fine on that 1060.
Thank you for testing that for me!
The_Patriarch wrote: »FlyingSwan wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »The_Patriarch wrote: »I have the opportunity to purchase an MSI gaming laptop from someone I know (he doesn't have the time to game anymore).
2.8 GHz Intel Core i7-7700HQ, 16GB ram, 500GB SSD + 1TB HHD, GTX 1060 6GB.
I assume this should be sufficient to run ESO. The GTX 1060 worries me as this is a mid-tier GPU and it might get behind-the-times sooner than later. I am also concerned about the 2.8 GHz CPU. However, I hope this set-up should be somewhat future-proof (3-5 years). What do you think?
I have the opportunity to upgrade from this to a stronger rig (but more than I'd like to pay), but if this would be okay for now, then I might go for it.
Dont worry about the xx60 cards. Those cards have always had the sweet spot of performance over price. And, since the real growth in GPU demand is 4K, you dont have much too worry about in the future. One, your never going to go over 4K, well maybe if you buy a 4K TV, but your going to go a different route for your PC anyway if you do that. You will be gaming on this for years to come.
That's great to hear. Thanks, @Nestor ! I might be coming over to PC soon.
Just tested on my Dell XPS15 and had 100fps open world dropping to 30-50 in towns. I was running 1080 res (native is 4k), and the GPU is actually a 1050, so you will be fine on that 1060.
Thank you for testing that for me!
Hateanthem wrote: »I'm the exact opposite. I switched to PS4 from PC. PC is great but I wanted to be able to sprawl out on my couch instead of sitting at a PC. Here are the differences I have noticed...
1) Community. The difference in community is massive. PC community is preferable. I have noticed that on the PS4, people's differences of opinion turn into terrible arguments with wild accusations. Lots of threatening and extremely immature behavior. I think this is because you can just talk to people out in the open world without having to have Discord or another chat program. Probably console has a somewhat younger community as well but that is just a guess as I have no real numbers.
2) Immersion. It's much easier to immerse yourself in the world on PC. Sometimes I forget to leave zone chat when out and about and out of nowhere a toon runs by with gangster rap blaring in the background while they are screaming at their siblings or friends or whatever. It can be annoying. You don't have that with PC.
3) Game knowledge. I have noticed the PC community seems to have a deeper knowledge of the game and pays attention to patch notes and game information much more closely than the console players.
I still enjoy being able to sprawl out on the couch and play on a massive TV more than sitting in my den playing on the PC, but I sure do miss the community.