deLioncourt wrote: »Some pretty nasty memory leaks present in this game in general, but with the release of Derpmire, the memory leak issue caused me to have to replace 2 out of 4 of my RAM-sticks. Its' definitely coming from the ESO client.
So Zenimax, how about you buy me two new ram-sticks?
deLioncourt wrote: »
Also, "If you think a memory leak somehow destroyed your RAM"
I never said that.
deLioncourt wrote: »deLioncourt wrote: »Kingslayer513 wrote: »
I’ve never had any of these problems that people seem to cry about 24/7, I don’t lag, never had any bugs or glitches, my game has been running perfectly fine since the day I started it up, you’re like a depressive tbh, every post I see you comment in always has something to do with ESO being broken or you just hate on the game in general, do you spend your entire day staring at forums and refreshing the page, just to find something to hate on? Seriously how about you find something better to do
It's mostly effecting endgame right now. The memory leaks/rendering issues have caused many trial teams a great deal of frustration and some are even taking breaks. It's definitely a widespread issue and very real, but if you don't play endgame you wouldn't notice.
Or if they're dumb and don't know anything about computers.
If you think a memory leak somehow destroyed your RAM then it's you that doesn't know anything about computers. Come on man..try googling before posting such outlandish threads of misinformation.
A program stores data in RAM that it will readily need so it can access it quickly (as opposed to accessing it from the hard drive). When data in RAM is no longer needed or is not as important as other data it's *supposed* to be swapped out of RAM.
A leak happens when that data isn't properly removed from RAM so it's "leaking" into your RAM free space. Over time more and more data that *is* needed keeps getting added and more data leaks into the free space until you run out of RAM space and the game/OS crashes or performs very badly. To fix a memory leak you just have to reboot or restart the application (not replace your RAM). This is a software problem not a hardware problem.
So while a memory leak isn't going to destroy your physical RAM that doesn't mean a memory leak isn't ESO's fault and it doesn't mean that a memory leak won't ruin your game play if it's bad enough.
This is a software problem not a hardware problem.
This is a software problem not a hardware problem.
This is a software problem not a hardware problem.
I wonder what software I was running that caused the problem?
Also, "If you think a memory leak somehow destroyed your RAM"
I never said that.
Seems people can't make a thread without the forum trolls popping up and telling people what they said and how they feel.
Played this game for four years straight, on this same computer, no major issues until Murkmire released, and now i'm having to replace computer parts because their functionality is being effected.
This computer can multi-box GTA5 with ENBs at 120fps, but load up ESO and I get BSOD?
K.
deLioncourt wrote: »deLioncourt wrote: »Kingslayer513 wrote: »
I’ve never had any of these problems that people seem to cry about 24/7, I don’t lag, never had any bugs or glitches, my game has been running perfectly fine since the day I started it up, you’re like a depressive tbh, every post I see you comment in always has something to do with ESO being broken or you just hate on the game in general, do you spend your entire day staring at forums and refreshing the page, just to find something to hate on? Seriously how about you find something better to do
It's mostly effecting endgame right now. The memory leaks/rendering issues have caused many trial teams a great deal of frustration and some are even taking breaks. It's definitely a widespread issue and very real, but if you don't play endgame you wouldn't notice.
Or if they're dumb and don't know anything about computers.
If you think a memory leak somehow destroyed your RAM then it's you that doesn't know anything about computers. Come on man..try googling before posting such outlandish threads of misinformation.
A program stores data in RAM that it will readily need so it can access it quickly (as opposed to accessing it from the hard drive). When data in RAM is no longer needed or is not as important as other data it's *supposed* to be swapped out of RAM.
A leak happens when that data isn't properly removed from RAM so it's "leaking" into your RAM free space. Over time more and more data that *is* needed keeps getting added and more data leaks into the free space until you run out of RAM space and the game/OS crashes or performs very badly. To fix a memory leak you just have to reboot or restart the application (not replace your RAM). This is a software problem not a hardware problem.
So while a memory leak isn't going to destroy your physical RAM that doesn't mean a memory leak isn't ESO's fault and it doesn't mean that a memory leak won't ruin your game play if it's bad enough.
This is a software problem not a hardware problem.
This is a software problem not a hardware problem.
This is a software problem not a hardware problem.
I wonder what software I was running that caused the problem?
Also, "If you think a memory leak somehow destroyed your RAM"
I never said that.
Seems people can't make a thread without the forum trolls popping up and telling people what they said and how they feel.
Played this game for four years straight, on this same computer, no major issues until Murkmire released, and now i'm having to replace computer parts because their functionality is being effected.
This computer can multi-box GTA5 with ENBs at 120fps, but load up ESO and I get BSOD?
K.
