Going back to your beginnings in PC gaming: the first game you played and loved, but the frame rate and resolution weren’t ideal. Your first “I need/want to upgrade my specs” basically.

  • Guy Fleegman@startrek.website
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    1 year ago

    Warcraft III. Voodoo2 wasn’t cutting it, upgraded to a GeForce4 MX420.

    … which still wasn’t really cutting it, so I spent every penny to my name and upgraded to a Radeon 9700 Pro like 6 months later.

    Man, I loved that card. Used it for years. To this day I think it was the card I held onto the longest.

    • porkrind@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      That’s when I went from no dedicated graphics to Voodoo3. I think it was already old by then, but worked well.

  • dexx4d@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Doom - we upgraded to 16MB of RAM so we could play it through Windows 95.

    Win95 wanted 4MB and Doom wanted all 8 that we had, so we had to exit, reboot, and go to DOS then run it manually.

      • chaogomu@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I had to run a boot disk because we couldn’t run Windows 3.1 and Doom 2 at the same time. Good times.

        My brother had a friend who knew how to upgrade computers, but we never got permission to do so. And then some years later my brother’s friend was taken by the state because his parents believed some of that early Sovereign Citizen bullshit and stopped paying taxes. I think there were also some drug charges. It was just personal amounts of pot, but it was the early 90s, so they were fucked.

  • Skray@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    World of Warcraft. I was on Windows XP with 512mb of RAM and who knows what graphics card but I was lagging so bad when WotLK came out.

    With all the people standing at the entrance to Naxx I had to basically aim myself for the portal and lag my way in without being able to see where my character was walking due to the lag.

    • Talose@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      The golden age of WoW man…

      My parents needed a new family PC right before it first launched, and I convinced them to get a slightly better version just so I could spend the next decade of my life raiding with the homies

  • Generic_Handel@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Probably Dungeons of Daggorath for the TRS-80 Color Computer.

    Edit- It was a Tandy Color Computer 2 circa 1986ish, went from 16K to 64K ram.

  • OmegaMouse@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    Not sure if this really counts, but I was given a copy of ‘The Movies’ when I was younger. Turns out it needed a DVD player to read it, but at the time I only had a CD player, so had to go out and buy an external DVD player to use it. Besides a few very lightweight PC games, I played on console most of the time and never got a true understanding of ‘specs’ until later in life.

  • Leon@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Half-Life 2. I remember being completely blown away by early source engine, even on low graphics to keep the frame rate above the 20s. I watched the weird little graphics benchmark animation probably a hundred times to dial in the settings. If you told me that in the future I’d be capping the framerate on highest settings to keep it from hitting the default limit of 300 I’da called you a liar.

    • Retro@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, I saw that e3 demo with the pachinko barrels, water physics, and wood breaking, and I just knew had I to play it with no compromises. Spent my life savings at the age of 14 to build my first computer. Paid a friend’s older brother to teach me how. 😅

    • LeylaaLovee@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 year ago

      I have no idea how Source went from being so taxing to so insubstantial in the course of a few years. By the time I really got into gaming around 2010, Source games were the ones we’d throw on our shit box laptops and play together in class.

  • glennglog22@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Blade and Sorcery, because my PC with a Ryzen 3 1200 and GTX 970 at the time could hardly run this and a lot of other VR games. And also Cyberpunk 2077, to a smaller degree.

  • packetloss@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been playing PC games since 1986. Started off with Kings Quest, and Heroes Quest. I can honestly say that no game has caused me to upgrade my PC until last year when I bought Cyberpunk 2077 because it was on sale. At the time I was running a 1080Ti, which is still a capable card, but I’m a whore for fancy graphics and visuals, and when I saw what CDPR was doing with Raytracing in that game I needed to have that. Pulled the trigger on a 4090 in January and haven’t regretted it for one minute. My 1080Ti lasted me 5 years, I’m anticipating my 4090 will do the same.

  • PenguinTD@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Quake1 after voodoo came out with transparent water patch. It’s so good it felt like cheating knowing some players have no idea that I can see through water. Resolution upgrade is a big enough advantage as well.(from 320x240 to 640x480 )

    Then Quake 3 I upgraded to nvidia’s TNT card.

    I think most of time I stay roughly with the upgrades(usually 2nd place card) with the exception during the bitcoin/covid time.(I stick with my 1080 oc version until I can buy 6800XT from amd direct.)

  • LyD@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Quake 4. I remember running it on a very cheap GPU and following tweakguides to get it running properly. The game that actually got me to pull the trigger on new hardware was Battlefield 2142.

  • _spiffy@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Battlefield 2. My dad and I went wild building our first PC together. Good times.

  • Uninvited Guest@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Neverwinter Nights. I was scraping by on the 800x600 resolution and lots of slowdowns. 2006 I built a new computer with a 1080x1080 LCD and turned on that glorious high resolution text option.

  • Octomagnus@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Skyrim. I had that running in integrated graphics on an old gateway I got. Once I started Playing pc games I new I had to have the best. 15 years later my younger self would be jealous of the rig I have today.

  • Talose@lemmy.zip
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    1 year ago

    Officially- Bioshock Infinite.

    I was still rocking my windows XP old faithful, and Infinite required the upgrade to windows 7. My motherboard didn’t support 7 though, so Old Faithful finally met its match