We are often told that in-game performance has to cater for the 'minimum spec' that Zos chooses as a bottom line. ...
Who TF cares?
First, this is an old game. Development started on this game about 10 years ago.
Second, self-professed "gamers" tend to be wildly out of touch with what people actually use for PC gaming. There are a lot of people who run below the "minimum" spec. Follow the "gaming" media, and you come away with the impression that nobody runs hardware over 3 years old. That's nonsense. Especially with the stagnation of Moore's Law in the last half decade, the performance difference between a system from 7 years ago and today isn't nearly as high as what it would've been a decade ago.
I have ESO installed on 6 computers. Ranging from my main system (Ivy Bridge i5, RX 570, plays just fine at max settings on 1080p), to an older system (Sandy Bridge i5, Radeon 6670, plays just fine at medium settings on 1080p), to my netbook. Yes, a netbook, with a 1.5GHz Ivy Bridge Celeron running integrated CPU graphics. Gets about 10fps with low settings at 768p--not playable, but just fine for logging in to get hirelings and train mounts.
"I exceed minimum spec by a long way"PC Gamers - Do you run close to minimum spec ?
Ydrisselle wrote: »
OP does seem a little out of touch. Zos has upgraded the minimum specs for the game at least twice since launch. In both cases there were players who could no longer play the game.
I have listed the most up to date recommendations from Zos @ 5/2/17
https://www.elderscrollsonline.com/en-us/news/post/26031
This is not an e-peen whos got the best PC thread, i am genuinely interested in how many 'casual' ,if you like, gamers play and if my assumptions that the min specs cater for a tiny portion of the player base are totally wrong.
And yes, i do realise that the forum in itself is only a small percentage of the playerbase.
DMuehlhausen wrote: »Who TF cares?
First, this is an old game. Development started on this game about 10 years ago.
Second, self-professed "gamers" tend to be wildly out of touch with what people actually use for PC gaming. There are a lot of people who run below the "minimum" spec. Follow the "gaming" media, and you come away with the impression that nobody runs hardware over 3 years old. That's nonsense. Especially with the stagnation of Moore's Law in the last half decade, the performance difference between a system from 7 years ago and today isn't nearly as high as what it would've been a decade ago.
I have ESO installed on 6 computers. Ranging from my main system (Ivy Bridge i5, RX 570, plays just fine at max settings on 1080p), to an older system (Sandy Bridge i5, Radeon 6670, plays just fine at medium settings on 1080p), to my netbook. Yes, a netbook, with a 1.5GHz Ivy Bridge Celeron running integrated CPU graphics. Gets about 10fps with low settings at 768p--not playable, but just fine for logging in to get hirelings and train mounts.
Salty much?