Like, Lucasarts style adventure or Bethesda style first person open world? Seeing the words, âoeIndiana Jones gamesâ, makes me salivate for the former and leaves me uncomfortable about the latter.
The implication that everyone is taking away is that the "exclusives" will be coming to PC. The implication I took away is that nVidia has a bunch of stuff that they're testing in the background, but not releasing publicly for expectation of lawsuits over it. The inclusion of Dolphin [dolphin-emu.org] seems to indicate that they're playing around with emulation capabilities and other things that would be unlikely to be officially released. Perhaps someone in the office is even supporting development of these emulators in
To be fair, consoles are cheaper. I think I paid more for may new GPU than I would have for a new console (not that either were easy to find).
I paid less for a RTX 3070 FE than I would for a new PS5 (granted, I'm not sure which would be harder to get at the moment) and the 3080 is 3 times as powerful as the entire PS5.
But the real savings as a PC gamer come from everything after the initial purchase price. Sony and MS sell the hardware as a loss leader, making it up in charging for extras like license fees and paid for multiplayer.
As a PC gamer, I buy at least 3-4 games a month. I've bought exactly 2 games over £30 this year (Cyberpun
Like, Lucasarts style adventure or Bethesda style first person open world? Seeing the words, âoeIndiana Jones gamesâ, makes me salivate for the former and leaves me uncomfortable about the latter.
The implication that everyone is taking away is that the "exclusives" will be coming to PC. The implication I took away is that nVidia has a bunch of stuff that they're testing in the background, but not releasing publicly for expectation of lawsuits over it. The inclusion of Dolphin [dolphin-emu.org] seems to indicate that they're playing around with emulation capabilities and other things that would be unlikely to be officially released. Perhaps someone in the office is even supporting development of these emulators in
To be fair, consoles are cheaper. I think I paid more for may new GPU than I would have for a new console (not that either were easy to find).
I paid less for a RTX 3070 FE than I would for a new PS5 (granted, I'm not sure which would be harder to get at the moment) and the 3080 is 3 times as powerful as the entire PS5.
But the real savings as a PC gamer come from everything after the initial purchase price. Sony and MS sell the hardware as a loss leader, making it up in charging for extras like license fees and paid for multiplayer.
As a PC gamer, I buy at least 3-4 games a month. I've bought exactly 2 games over £30 this year (Cyberpun