Imagine supporting Denuvo lmao. What a guy
They’re meaning a model with SteamOS preinstalled. They don’t want to pay an extra $200 on it if a SteamOS model will be released for $200 less than the Windows model. They’re putting Bazzite on it regardless of whether they get a Windows model or if they buy a SteamOS model if/when that comes out.
Well, it certainly runs better than that on a 6650XT. I’m mainly referring to the highly variable FPS and hitching seen even on a 4090/5090. In the tutorial I had 60fps on High with FSR enabled. But in the open world it was up and down from 30 to 60 and dropping to 5 every few minutes. Apparently someone’s made a mod to fix that and it’s a fairly common thing with UE5 games. I refunded before I learned about that mod but I’m honestly just gonna play the original instead.
As for your 1060… Well, it is way underpowered. That’s what I upgraded from. It’s largely outdated for modern titles in general.
6650XT gang. Been a good card for me so far. The only game I’ve had crawling to a halt so far is the Oblivion remaster (refunded after realizing it ran like dogshit, not just on my system, but on any system). Was the best option at the time (late 2024) for my money and I needed an upgrade badly. I might upgrade to the 9060 XT for raytracing though since it’s dogass on the 6650XT. That is my only regret so far.
Fantastic game but I’m honestly so shit at the combat. So my Henry is a goth who prowls at night, stealing the goods of every shopkeeper in his quest for revenge.
Also, massacred the monastery and accidentally saved so I guess he’s done that, too.
Funniest thing is those patents were filed after Palworld’s release. Nintendo really has no leg to stand on.
EDIT: Also, Pokemon itself was released after Shin Megami Tensei. It’s important to realize that while Pokemon may have perfected the monster collecting genre (for a time - I’m looking at you, Scarlet/Violet…) they were certainly not its progenitor and never have been the only player in the field.
That’s before sales tax as well (5%-15% province-dependent)