mikeymikec
Lifer
- May 19, 2011
- 20,041
- 14,415
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whats wrong with playing a game the way it was intended, without mods?
that way when you talk about the game with your friends, you arent talking about some version only you played. it's about having a common experience with other people this is a huge part of gaming.
you guys keep throwing these little digs in with your posts "i feel bad for you.." etc...
its really pathetic
Oblivion Stock PC & Console:-whats wrong with playing a game the way it was intended, without mods?
Brb buying a pc then turning down all the settings to match console.
Got to play it how the developer intended!
#Futurefields #itsreallypathetic
Use turds as deodorant and claim you smell fresh. It's a free country.
But that doesn't fly with the majority of thinking adults. So don't be surprised when you pass that logic off as bulletproof but then get called on it.
...
what?
That's the console world.it's about having a common experience with other people this is a huge part of gaming.
No. He's going against what the developers intended. Burn him at the stake!!!What are you, some kind of wizard?
I have found myself more and more recently sort of sideways eyeballing the newer consoles out there for the first time. I have been gaming on PC since, well, forever. With more and more games being written with consoles in mind first and then quickly and often messily ported to the PC, or even some really good games limited solely to consoles (The Last of US, etc.) sometimes I wish I had one.
I recently finished Dragon Age Inquisition on my PC, playing the entire time with a Xbox controller. There were times when I thought how nice it would be to play the game on my 46" TV, kicked back on the couch rather than sitting at my computer desk. I'm sure I could build another PC for such purposes, but a $400 console would be a hell of a lot easier.
http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Tes5Mod:Developer_Mods/Kurt_Kuhlmann#Real_CarriagesNo. He's going against what the developers intended. Burn him at the stake!!!
I have found myself more and more recently sort of sideways eyeballing the newer consoles out there for the first time. I have been gaming on PC since, well, forever. With more and more games being written with consoles in mind first and then quickly and often messily ported to the PC, or even some really good games limited solely to consoles (The Last of US, etc.) sometimes I wish I had one.
I recently finished Dragon Age Inquisition on my PC, playing the entire time with a Xbox controller. There were times when I thought how nice it would be to play the game on my 46" TV, kicked back on the couch rather than sitting at my computer desk. I'm sure I could build another PC for such purposes, but a $400 console would be a hell of a lot easier.
Hook your pc up to a TV then?
I haven't used a Computer monitor for a pc in 6 years. Only TV.
If you like laying down on a couch with your pc, it does that. That's why pc is great, flexibility.
My 2 pc displays are an 80 inch projector and a 70 inch HDTV.
There's even a mod for that too. And that's the beauty of PC's : when publishers NEVER set themselves / developers enough time to properly test & optimize increasingly complex games, then modding increasingly becomes more of a requirement than a luxury (certainly for large open-world games). See the unofficial bug fix list containing literally hundreds / thousands of post-official-fix errors for Oblivion & Skyrim.If you can't die from hypothermia while trekking through the woods after swimming across a river, what's the point of all the winter weather effects?
I haven't worked the logistics of that out yet. My PC is about 50 feet from the closest TV and I don't want to move it. I guess I could run a really long HDMI cable, but trying to route that through walls / finished ceilings is tough. Then, how does the controller work? I would need something wireless but also RF right? It seems complicated. Maybe once the whole Steam streaming thing gets more refined that might be a solution.
Refined? It works perfectly I use steam in home streaming every day.
what more refinement does it need....
And you can't run a 50 foot hdmi cord doesn't work.
The only times I have tried it were over my wireless network, and it seemed like graphically intense games didn't work all that well. Also, if other family members are streaming or otherwise consuming a large amount of wireless bandwidth performance seems to suffer. Of course the solution is to run an ethernet cable to the receiving PC, but that brings about the same problems of running cables in a finished house that was built before ethernet was common.
I have found myself more and more recently sort of sideways eyeballing the newer consoles out there for the first time. I have been gaming on PC since, well, forever. With more and more games being written with consoles in mind first and then quickly and often messily ported to the PC, or even some really good games limited solely to consoles (The Last of US, etc.) sometimes I wish I had one.
I recently finished Dragon Age Inquisition on my PC, playing the entire time with a Xbox controller. There were times when I thought how nice it would be to play the game on my 46" TV, kicked back on the couch rather than sitting at my computer desk. I'm sure I could build another PC for such purposes, but a $400 console would be a hell of a lot easier.
Sorry, I'm really used to people being technical enough to know exactly why something doesn't work.
<snipped>
Thanks for the detailed response.
I think I am plenty technical enough to know why this doesn't work well for me, yet I am practical enough to know none of the solutions are easily implemented. I have setup a powerline system and was rather underwhelmed by the performance. As you stated, running ethernet is the only real solution but I also know what it takes to run that cable to where I need it and I know the "boss" isn't going to put the stamp of approval on that!
Then again, it has been some time since I tried the home streaming feature. Last time I did there were only a handful of games supported that I owned but I imagine things have moved along since then.
My office PC used to be both my gaming PC and productivity PC in one. Now they're separated, I built an HTPC gaming rig for my 46" 3DTV and never looked back. There's something special about PC gaming on the big screen, with an X360 controller, wireless keyboard/mouse, and full home theater surround system that puts all "real" consoles to shame. My office PC is still powerful enough for games, but now it doesn't feel "right" anymore....gotta have that big screen TV and couch to lay back on. :lol: In fact, once 3D Vision is confirmed for 4k support, my next TV will be an LG 4k model. My "HTPC" is actually a full sized tower computer sitting right next to my subwoofer, but I've built smaller HTPC's with entry/mid level hardware for other people that's still powerful enough for 1080p gaming, and still quite more powerful than these "next gen" consoles.
Powerline Adapter I linked does work, it's just expensive. So it's up to you to decide if that cost is worth it. I don't like to say it will 100% work because well, anything can happen with that tech.
I don't know what powerline adapter you've used in the past, but there are a ton of them that suck.
Ways around this? You can try Powerline Networking. That's pretty much the only thing you can do if you don't want to run ethernet line. I really don't like to recommend this option. A LOT of people do, and I've used Powerline Networking since it's inception. It runs ok, but it gives nowhere near the advertised speed (just like wifi!) and it can be finnicky. It's worth a shot though, especially if you order from a place with a good return policy (Amazon Prime, Bestbuy).