Lately there have been several PC releases that were in quite the shoddy state (Rage, Deus Ex: HR, etc) at release. According to many reviews' comments and forum posts this is due to the nigh infinite number of combinations of components in computers.
Although this sort of reasoning is generally accepted, I beg to differ.. for two reasons:
1. Back in the day games were more stable. Sure, they may not have been as complex, but the diversity in systems was likely equal to the present situation.
2. The variety in parts from one PC to the next is not that great. Since the hard drive, ram and motherboard don't really matter in this respect, the diversity would be amoung the CPU, graphics card and sound cards. Nowadays everyone has either an AMD or Intel processor and an AMD or Nvidia graphics card. Although there are a lot of different processors, the base architecture all boils down to the same. The fact that Nvidia and AMD release just one driver for all their current cards must mean the same goes for graphics cards. How the situation is for sound cards nowadays, I don't really know, so I'm leaving that as a possible cause for our problem.
What's your take on this? Is it just an excuse or is it a valid argument?
Although this sort of reasoning is generally accepted, I beg to differ.. for two reasons:
1. Back in the day games were more stable. Sure, they may not have been as complex, but the diversity in systems was likely equal to the present situation.
2. The variety in parts from one PC to the next is not that great. Since the hard drive, ram and motherboard don't really matter in this respect, the diversity would be amoung the CPU, graphics card and sound cards. Nowadays everyone has either an AMD or Intel processor and an AMD or Nvidia graphics card. Although there are a lot of different processors, the base architecture all boils down to the same. The fact that Nvidia and AMD release just one driver for all their current cards must mean the same goes for graphics cards. How the situation is for sound cards nowadays, I don't really know, so I'm leaving that as a possible cause for our problem.
What's your take on this? Is it just an excuse or is it a valid argument?