Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
Uh oh, this new game requires a CPU that's been widely available for over 3 years in order to run at optimal settings! I can't imagine what the developers were thinking, trying to actually usefully exploit modern commodity computer hardware. What a terrible idea.
I mean, the cheapest quad-core CPU on newegg is over $75. Who could possibly afford that kind of extreme high-end part simply to play a current game on maximum detail? Quite absurd ~_~
I mean, the cheapest quad-core CPU on newegg is over $75. Who could possibly afford that kind of extreme high-end part simply to play a current game on maximum detail? Quite absurd ~_~
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
I'm really struggling to understand the controversy in this thread. The minimum requirements say 'dual core'. Who cares what they recommend? The minimum is the only thing you need to look at to determine whether you can play a game or not.
Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
A largely static turn-based game being a performance pusher? Sounds normal to me! After all if a box can push millions of polys a second in Gangbusters The Nosehairening, why wouldn't they be happy to pay more money to play a series of postcards overlaid on a spreadsheet?Seggybop wrote:Uh oh, this new game requires a CPU that's been widely available for over 3 years in order to run at optimal settings! I can't imagine what the developers were thinking, trying to actually usefully exploit modern commodity computer hardware. What a terrible idea.
I mean, the cheapest quad-core CPU on newegg is over $75. Who could possibly afford that kind of extreme high-end part simply to play a current game on maximum detail? Quite absurd ~_~
Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
Yeah, exactly. I'm with Seaskimmer on this, I bet it's bullshit.
Even if it really does require a quad core for Super Optimised Hyper Fast Gameplay... um, just turn the settings down for fuck's sake. Civ games are easily moddable. Ironically, the mods are even better than the original game.
Even if it really does require a quad core for Super Optimised Hyper Fast Gameplay... um, just turn the settings down for fuck's sake. Civ games are easily moddable. Ironically, the mods are even better than the original game.
Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
'Minimum requirements' are almost always a lie - i.e. they are way too low for the game to be playable. Your requirements should really be closer to the recommended specs - the closer you get to minimum, the more rubbish the game runs, as a general rule.
I hope they're realistic, but I don't have a lot of hope. Oh well, I'll probably be upgraded by the time I play Civ5 anyway.
I hope they're realistic, but I don't have a lot of hope. Oh well, I'll probably be upgraded by the time I play Civ5 anyway.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
It's likely the CPU load will be AI, and you'd think a dimple option would let you scale it.
But this is Firaxis.
But this is Firaxis.
Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
Real-time vs. turn-based is irrelevant; with turn-based, higher processing requirements translate into greater time between turns rather than lag but substantial computation is still necessary anywayStark wrote:A largely static turn-based game being a performance pusher? Sounds normal to me! After all if a box can push millions of polys a second in Gangbusters The Nosehairening, why wouldn't they be happy to pay more money to play a series of postcards overlaid on a spreadsheet?
Brute-force AI like they're probably using should be easily parallelizable so you could theoretically split it among an arbitrary number of cores and get near-linear performance improvement. I don't understand why you think this is a bad thing (do you want people with modern computers to be capped at performance levels from 4 years ago?) or even why you find quad-core to be such an impressive piece of gear (maybe you guys in Australia are stuck with prices from 3 years ago or something). Regardless, fewer cores simply means it'll either take longer to process a turn, or you'll need to make the AI dumber if you want the same period. Nothing especially unreasonable.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
That sounds like nonsense to me. Why even have minimum vs recommended requirements anyway?Vympel wrote:'Minimum requirements' are almost always a lie - i.e. they are way too low for the game to be playable. Your requirements should really be closer to the recommended specs - the closer you get to minimum, the more rubbish the game runs, as a general rule.
lolI hope they're realistic, but I don't have a lot of hope. Oh well, I'll probably be upgraded by the time I play Civ5 anyway.
I've considered upgrading, but certainly not to play a Civ game.
Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
I dunno, to fool people who can't hope to run the game to buy it anyway. Its quite common. You've never heard of this? I thought everyone knew this stuff.Stofsk wrote: That sounds like nonsense to me. Why even have minimum vs recommended requirements anyway?
Its not to play a civ game. I was always going to upgrade at the end of this year, my PC's 4 years old in October. I want a Windows 7 machine with a DX11 graphics card. I want to play Just Cause 2 and shit (i.e. every other game that runs DX10 and 11 with fancy schmancy features).
I've considered upgrading, but certainly not to play a Civ game.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
This and Deus Ex 3 (unless the PC version is gimped) are making me lean towards an upgrade in the near future.I've considered upgrading, but certainly not to play a Civ game.
A scientist once gave a public lecture on astronomy. He described how the Earth orbits around the sun and how the sun, in turn, orbits around the centre of a vast collection of stars called our galaxy.
At the end of the lecture, a little old lady at the back of the room got up and said: 'What you have told us is rubbish. The world is really a flat plate supported on the back of a giant tortoise.
The scientist gave a superior smile before replying, 'What is the tortoise standing on?'
'You're very clever, young man, very clever,' said the old lady. 'But it's turtles all the way down.'
At the end of the lecture, a little old lady at the back of the room got up and said: 'What you have told us is rubbish. The world is really a flat plate supported on the back of a giant tortoise.
The scientist gave a superior smile before replying, 'What is the tortoise standing on?'
'You're very clever, young man, very clever,' said the old lady. 'But it's turtles all the way down.'
Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
When talking about performance expectations, the fact a game does essentially nothing 99% or 99.9% of the time is irrelevant. You heard it here first.Seggybop wrote:Real-time vs. turn-based is irrelevant; with turn-based, higher processing requirements translate into greater time between turns rather than lag but substantial computation is still necessary anyway
Maybe with other improvements they've resolved some of the lategame turn-time blowout issues ... but I'm not optimistic.
Did you just repeat what people have been saying since post 2 or ... what? The adults have even talked about other games having options for such. Can you read?Seggybop wrote:Brute-force AI like they're probably using should be easily parallelizable so you could theoretically split it among an arbitrary number of cores and get near-linear performance improvement. I don't understand why you think this is a bad thing (do you want people with modern computers to be capped at performance levels from 4 years ago?) or even why you find quad-core to be such an impressive piece of gear (maybe you guys in Australia are stuck with prices from 3 years ago or something). Regardless, fewer cores simply means it'll either take longer to process a turn, or you'll need to make the AI dumber if you want the same period. Nothing especially unreasonable.
And yeah sorry, I'll probably never upgrade my computer again because there's nothing worth playing on the platform I can't already play. A strategy game that should be resource-light isn't going to change that, especially if it's laughably requiring hardware that far more visually impressive games don't, and particularly since its AI is frankly likely to be rubbish anyway.
Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
I was planning on getting this before the computer upgrade, looks like it's going to be after. Sadly I haven't had a major upgrade in a good five or so years, was hoping to push it off another few months.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
It's probably technically possible to rewrite the AI to run mostly on the GPU, although that's very difficult programming that the developer likely doesn't have anyone competent to do. That would let you run at several times the speed on a dual-core, but then you'd just be bitching and whining about needing a DirectX 11 graphics card instead. Obviously the developer isn't going to do this as a lot more people have quad core CPUs than Radeon 5xxx or Nvidia 4xx series GPUs.
What would be hilarious is if the developer said 'Due to cheapskate whiners bitching about how our last game was unplayable on ancient PCs, our next game will use cloud-based AI. Fast turn times at max difficultly on a netbook! Sure it needs a constant connection to our servers, but everyone has a perfectly reliable 24/7 internet connection now and you can trust us not to underprovision the servers or turn them off in a few years time!'
What would be hilarious is if the developer said 'Due to cheapskate whiners bitching about how our last game was unplayable on ancient PCs, our next game will use cloud-based AI. Fast turn times at max difficultly on a netbook! Sure it needs a constant connection to our servers, but everyone has a perfectly reliable 24/7 internet connection now and you can trust us not to underprovision the servers or turn them off in a few years time!'
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
If they did that I'd just sit and laugh at all the Aussies that still couldn't play it.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
Well the upgrade requirement plus the steam thing in order to play a turn based strategy game means this will be the first Civ game that doesn't devour 6 months of my life after release.
Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
Nobody cares about latency in a turn based game.Norade wrote:If they did that I'd just sit and laugh at all the Aussies that still couldn't play it.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
True, and for all your net based trouble you do get to rent PC games for nothing and I surer as shit can't do that where I am. I can still laugh at you for having such harsh data transfer caps though.Stark wrote:Nobody cares about latency in a turn based game.Norade wrote:If they did that I'd just sit and laugh at all the Aussies that still couldn't play it.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
Just thought I'd leave this here to gauge some reactions. I do not approve.
A scientist once gave a public lecture on astronomy. He described how the Earth orbits around the sun and how the sun, in turn, orbits around the centre of a vast collection of stars called our galaxy.
At the end of the lecture, a little old lady at the back of the room got up and said: 'What you have told us is rubbish. The world is really a flat plate supported on the back of a giant tortoise.
The scientist gave a superior smile before replying, 'What is the tortoise standing on?'
'You're very clever, young man, very clever,' said the old lady. 'But it's turtles all the way down.'
At the end of the lecture, a little old lady at the back of the room got up and said: 'What you have told us is rubbish. The world is really a flat plate supported on the back of a giant tortoise.
The scientist gave a superior smile before replying, 'What is the tortoise standing on?'
'You're very clever, young man, very clever,' said the old lady. 'But it's turtles all the way down.'
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
This thread is hilarious. The said peopel grumbling about spending a few hundred dollars to get their PCs up and running on this game, of which the recommended specs are practically for PCs 3 years old and over, spend hundreds on consoles and typically more expensive console games.
Oh cry me a fucking river.
Oh cry me a fucking river.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
You're a retard. If I'm going to spend $200 to play games, I want to be able to play more than one. What kind of idiot spends $200 on their cpu just to play one game when most games will work on lower specced hardware? Likewise, I'm not going to buy a console just to play one game. But obviously you don't understand the concept of getting your money's worth.Fingolfin_Noldor wrote:This thread is hilarious. The said peopel grumbling about spending a few hundred dollars to get their PCs up and running on this game, of which the recommended specs are practically for PCs 3 years old and over, spend hundreds on consoles and typically more expensive console games.
Oh cry me a fucking river.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
You think that is bad?adam_grif wrote:Just thought I'd leave this here to gauge some reactions. I do not approve.
http://www.civilization5.com/#/communit ... _resources
Also buildings require gold to maintain again. That is one way to encourage specialization.When you construct an improvement on a strategic resource hex, it provides you with a limited number of those resources, and these are consumed when you construct the associated units or buildings.
Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
I like the Giant Death Robot. It's pretty funny. And more interesting than spamming Modern Armor in Civ3 was.
The strategic resources concept sounds interesting. My biggest beef with it in Civ3 (never played Civ4, though hoping to buy Complete Edition soon) was that I would never seem to have any. There would be a whole three deposits of iron on even Huge maps it seemed, and naturally none of them were near me.
I hope Civ5 is a lot better about resource placement.
The strategic resources concept sounds interesting. My biggest beef with it in Civ3 (never played Civ4, though hoping to buy Complete Edition soon) was that I would never seem to have any. There would be a whole three deposits of iron on even Huge maps it seemed, and naturally none of them were near me.
I hope Civ5 is a lot better about resource placement.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
You left out a very important detail, though.Samuel wrote:You think that is bad?
http://www.civilization5.com/#/communit ... _resources
When you construct an improvement on a strategic resource hex, it provides you with a limited number of those resources, and these are consumed when you construct the associated units or buildings.
So it's not "you can only build X swordsman ever from that square," it's "you can only build X swordsman from that square at a time". I like the idea, as it means even if everyone who likes you has a square of iron, it helps to have more than one, yourself. Horses being the same kind of resource as iron is still silly, but nothing big.The resource becomes available to you once more if the unit or building is destroyed.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
Actually; I think the reason they raised the requirments for CPUs was to ensure that the game is playable in a reasonable amount of time.
With time passing at a "Standard" difficulty; you can have more than 400+ turns in a single game.
Going from squares to hexes increases the amount of processing time it takes for a single unit to consider "should I move to this part?" for the AI by a noticeable amount when averaged over several AI players and turns.
What I think is the real killer AI-processing wise; is the addition of ranged attacks. Now the AI has to look at an increasingly larger number of hexes for each move cycle.
Ranged Attack ranges:
0: 6 Hexes the AI has to consider.
1: 18 hexes the AI has to consider.
2: 36 hexes the AI has to consider.
This kind of thing killed Space Empires V.
For that game, they made sensors much more complex; in that you wouldn't be able to see enemy ships outside your sensor range, etc. Sound all good and dandy?
It turns out that calculating the sight ranges for ships/taskforces/planets each turn significantly bloats up the turn processing time; and given that the Space Empires series is very methodical -- it significantly increased teh amount of time spent each turn and basically made the game unplayable.
Of course, there was an option for turning off that sensor calculation, but then it was Space Empires IV with a worse UI.
With time passing at a "Standard" difficulty; you can have more than 400+ turns in a single game.
Going from squares to hexes increases the amount of processing time it takes for a single unit to consider "should I move to this part?" for the AI by a noticeable amount when averaged over several AI players and turns.
What I think is the real killer AI-processing wise; is the addition of ranged attacks. Now the AI has to look at an increasingly larger number of hexes for each move cycle.
Ranged Attack ranges:
0: 6 Hexes the AI has to consider.
1: 18 hexes the AI has to consider.
2: 36 hexes the AI has to consider.
This kind of thing killed Space Empires V.
For that game, they made sensors much more complex; in that you wouldn't be able to see enemy ships outside your sensor range, etc. Sound all good and dandy?
It turns out that calculating the sight ranges for ships/taskforces/planets each turn significantly bloats up the turn processing time; and given that the Space Empires series is very methodical -- it significantly increased teh amount of time spent each turn and basically made the game unplayable.
Of course, there was an option for turning off that sensor calculation, but then it was Space Empires IV with a worse UI.
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Re: Civ5 to bring my PC to its knees, do not want
In Civ4, strategic resources are widely available enough that unless you are truly unlucky you will have all you need. By and large, cutting an enemy off from strategic resources requires a systematic offensive against the relevant extraction industry; other people may be better at doing that than I am, but I've never found it worth the effort.RogueIce wrote:I like the Giant Death Robot. It's pretty funny. And more interesting than spamming Modern Armor in Civ3 was.
The strategic resources concept sounds interesting. My biggest beef with it in Civ3 (never played Civ4, though hoping to buy Complete Edition soon) was that I would never seem to have any. There would be a whole three deposits of iron on even Huge maps it seemed, and naturally none of them were near me.
I hope Civ5 is a lot better about resource placement.
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