I would consider myself a pc elitist but using emulators on the PC proves that they are better. It has nothing to do about the games as far as I am concerned its more about consoles being a casual gamer tool rather than a multiplayer platform with closer networks. That said theres nothing wrong with casual gaming as I myself am a rather busy person also.TehCookie said:Nah, just the loud PC elitists. No one notices the quite guys enjoying their games.LilithSlave said:I dunno, gamers seem to make a big deal out of being a "PC gamer".Vault101 said:uhh..I guess?
does it really matter?
Also nobody cares about them.TehCookie said:Nah, just the loud PC elitists. No one notices the quite guys enjoying their games.LilithSlave said:I dunno, gamers seem to make a big deal out of being a "PC gamer".Vault101 said:uhh..I guess?
does it really matter?
Console gamers tend to play sports or split screen games with their friends and indulge in other herasies.kingthrall said:I would consider myself a pc elitist but using emulators on the PC proves that they are better. It has nothing to do about the games as far as I am concerned its more about consoles being a casual gamer tool rather than a multiplayer platform with closer networks. That said theres nothing wrong with casual gaming as I myself am a rather busy person also.TehCookie said:Nah, just the loud PC elitists. No one notices the quite guys enjoying their games.LilithSlave said:I dunno, gamers seem to make a big deal out of being a "PC gamer".Vault101 said:uhh..I guess?
does it really matter?
360 gamers got hold of Minecraft yesterday, although it's missing quite a few bells and whistles compared to the PC version. I think the 360 version is 1.5 or 1.6, so we're missing a few things. We're also missing the hunger bar and they added a recipe chart type thing on the crafting table, so you know what you need for everything you make.octafish said:Do you play games on a PC? Yes? PC Gamer then.
Oh and PC Gamers frequently boast of Minecraft and Indie opportunities that Console Gamers miss out on.
Well in the case of PC vs Console, buying a console would be a significant investment for me, and I wouldn't enjoy it. There would be few - if any - games I'd buy on it, and the controls would hurt my fingers [They already do after 10 minutes playing at a friends house].Lovely Mixture said:There is no need to define oneself as a PC gamer or a Console gamer. I believe no one should limit themselves to playing only on PC or only on console.
For me, it's like people who war between Marvel and DC and decide to only read one brand, why would you do that?
Hateren47 said:
Depends how much you OC'ed you 2500K really. The 6870 drags you down a few points (-6 [http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/gaming-graphics-card-review,3107-7.html]) but every 100MHz beyond 4GHz will add another point (2 points per 100MHz if you have liquid cooling). Building your own rig is +5 points as well. If you can collect more than 0 points you're a PC gamer. Those are the official rules.
Also if your tower says Dell, HP, Alienware, Asus, etc. on the side or is a laptop/all-in-1 you're automatically disqualified. Of course.
Let me give you Griffolion's short questionnaire to determining your status as a PC gamer:LilithSlave said:-snip-
Oooooh.LilithSlave said:T
- Prefer playing games with a controller
- Own a mountain of gaming peripherals for the PC, like USB controllers.
You have a point but i didn't want to seem elitist. Also if I knew Asus put in stickers with the MB I would have got one of those. I do think liquid cooling should give more points though. It's just so geeky.Joccaren said:Hateren47 said:
Depends how much you OC'ed you 2500K really. The 6870 drags you down a few points (-6 [http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/gaming-graphics-card-review,3107-7.html]) but every 100MHz beyond 4GHz will add another point (2 points per 100MHz if you have liquid cooling). Building your own rig is +5 points as well. If you can collect more than 0 points you're a PC gamer. Those are the official rules.Hrrm. I'd say that depends. Having an Asus Motherboard isn't necessarily all bad - and you get a sticker that you can use on your case from that.
Hrrm. I dunno. I'm not so sure we should give people an advantage by using water cooling [Also: Bonus points for making your own liquid cooling loop, and use an alternate coolant to water.]. I believe that should fall under Rig Design, which should depend not just on the fact that you built your own rig - but how well you built it: The quality of the parts, the competence shown whilst building, and how neat your cables are - ensuring they are kept out of the way of air flow is highly important.
I also think the 2500K and 2600K make overclocking too easy. Maybe 1 extra point for every 200-300Mhz over 4Ghz.
Also, any graphics card loss of points CAN be regained if you overclock that too. 1 point for every... 50Mhz clock speed? Not too sure on this one...
Also if your tower says Dell, HP, Alienware, Asus, etc. on the side or is a laptop/all-in-1 you're automatically disqualified. Of course.
However, any rig pre-built by those brands is instant disqualification.
Having an expensive Alienware Rig is permanent disqualification.
Using the cases made by those companies also results in a loss of points - unless used ironically as a joke - though a primary "I mean business" case must be owned as proof of the joke/irony.
Keeping low standards will allow far too many 'Normal' people into our ranks. No, we cannot allow that. We must ensure the integrity of our title, and with the increasing ease at which casuals are able to complete several basic tasks such as overclocking - we need to raise our standards.
As evidence, I present the auto-overclock tool that comes with a P8P67 motherboard. On its own it is able to overclock a 2600K to at least 4.6Ghz, allowing a casual who decides to use the program able to pass the grade as a "PC gamer". We cannot allow this!