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12/26/12 2:22:09 PM#21
PC gaming is the only sector or the PC market that is actually picking up and selling more stuff. The basic PC market took a hit and the laptop market took a hit, but the gaming PC market is actually growing. I'm sure Microsoft and Sony would love to see things all go to a console, but there's a limit to how much they can push things that way. ** edit ** A reference article on PC Gamer: http://www.pcgamer.com/2012/12/20/next-gen-consoles-will-struggle-to-beat-pc-say-industry-insiders/ ** edit edit ** I put that link there so you'd know I wasn't just making stuff up. There are more articles online about the PC gaming market growing instead of shrinking, even with the other economic stuff going on. Join the League For Gamers. |
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12/26/12 2:30:26 PM#22
"Will a tablet era ruin PC gaming?" Just received a Nexus 7 yesterday, my first tablet. Spent today unlocking and rooting. And I say...no it won't. |
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12/26/12 2:30:35 PM#23
Originally posted by lizardbones This also has to do with an inevitable limit on console games. The hardware gets old faster than the makers can justify forcing people to upgrade, and the console game developers are coding for a specific hardware target in a lot of cases. The best games on the 360 look like arse compared to what a medium-powered gaming PC can do.
All I can think about is Star Citizen. |
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12/26/12 2:36:15 PM#24
Tablet gaming... I'd honestly rather bust out the old NES / SNES. Tablet gaming / Twitter / facebook = Social Bacteria. |
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12/26/12 2:36:59 PM#25
Originally posted by iamrta I love my Nexus 7. Such a great little device. I unlocked and rooted mine too, but I'm not going to use a different ROM. We are on 4.2 now while most other devices are on much older versions. All I can think about is Star Citizen. |
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12/26/12 2:42:14 PM#26
you guys didn't hear about the Angry Birds mmo?
I think the prostitute mod corrupted your game files man. -elhefen |
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12/26/12 2:43:03 PM#27
Yeah, I kind of think the real loser in all of this is going to be console gaming. At least in terms of specific companies having a console. The people who want bigger, better, faster, more are going to go with PCs, and everyone else is going to buy a box that does all your media streaming, general web surfing and email, along with a bunch of games. The people who don't care about games will use regular remote controls, and the people who do will buy blue tooth game controllers. It'll be a general purpose entertainment console instead of a general purpose computer. Something like that anyway. Join the League For Gamers. |
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Roguewiz
Hard Core Member
Joined: 9/01/02
When a Kender says "oops!"; its already too late. |
12/26/12 2:53:37 PM#28
^ that
Generally speaking, Gaming consoles are computers. The only thing they are lacking is the ability to us Productivity Software. Even that may change with the release of Windows 8. Honestly speaking, Microsoft could easily release a "XBOX Computer" that can play their games, run office, and browse the internet. We're almost there as it is. Think about it. You can browse the internet, download apps to suppliment certain websites, like TNT, ESPN, Crunchyroll, Hulu, etc. I see us moving towards your "XBOX" or "Playstation" as being your entertainment device for your TV. Toss in an equalizer, some speakers, and you could do it right now. I be Raq, destroyer of game balance! Gamer for Rent! Playing: Nothing really. More or less in a holding pattern, and running out of gas. |
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12/26/12 2:56:15 PM#29
Tablets aren't doing anything to PC gaming. They are introducing masses to gaming. I think it's a good thing .
Tablets are part of the transition that's been going on in the gaming industry. The casual market took off thanks to tablet, facebook games and so on.
The most important thing to watch out for is how is going to influence input devices. Is touch going to completely take over? I don't think so, but the era of physical input like controllers or mouse and keyboards is definitely going to end eventually. How are we going to end up? Who knows! It's probably going to be some kind of hybrid technology between all input types available. |
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12/26/12 3:11:19 PM#30
Originally posted by mmoDAD Yeah, lol. The only use I have for my ipad now is bathroom reading material. My laptop and netbook are just superior pieces of technology for my needs. And don't even get me started on Twatter let alone facebook. I can't believe people are still using facebook. It's madness, I tell you ;) "I agree that "unimaginable complexity" is absurd, but so is comparing a single player game to an mmo. It's like comparing masturbation to sex, they are similar in some respects, but really are not comparable." -jimdandy26 |
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Roguewiz
Hard Core Member
Joined: 9/01/02
When a Kender says "oops!"; its already too late. |
12/26/12 3:13:56 PM#31
Originally posted by Cecropia So true. The only reason I use Facebook is because of my siblings and parents. Otherwise, I wouldn't have it. Also, I'm glad I'm not the only one that uses a tablet in the can. I play Minecraft or browse ESPN while I make my "deposit" with the 1st Bank of John. I be Raq, destroyer of game balance! Gamer for Rent! Playing: Nothing really. More or less in a holding pattern, and running out of gas. |
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12/26/12 3:14:16 PM#32
No but i do see tablets and laptops becoming one and the same. Convertable notebooks are already happening but soon i think you will see even more kinda like the asus transformer prime book. It's a tablet the connects to a keyboard that holds a graphics card and if im not mistaken a stronger processer. So basically you can disconnect it and have the same things you get with a tablet, or connect it to the keyboard and have the power needed for gaming.
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12/26/12 3:19:50 PM#33
Originally posted by lizardbones Power consumed = heat generated. That's what happens to the power when it gets used. It's the law of conservation of energy. And yes, heat dissipation is the more direct problem. From a battery perspective, you could make a tablet that puts out 40 W and just has a really short battery life. But if you try to fit that into a typical tablet form factor, you probably have a heat-related hardware failure before you manage to drain the battery. |
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12/26/12 3:20:28 PM#34
I find console peripheral gaming is a brutal idea.Their shelf life is about 2-3 years,as the makers find new gimmicks to sell each and every christmas.Pc's although always improving,the games actually do not.Simple case in point,the devs don't want to retrain,so they stick forever with old tech.Also devs don't like to alienate customers,so yo ustill see them using DX9 ,even tohugh we have seen DX 10 [Vista] DX11 win 7 and now Windows 8 DX libraries.We will probably see Windows 10/11/12 before we see any dev making a Win 8 game. The problem i see is overall bandwidth ,memory and still the need for space.If a game tries to stream or play like a browser game,then yes it wil lbe crap.No question the technology is here,just look at the Epic Citadel app by Epic games.That was a simple map made by one person that is more detaield than msot otehr games maps that are doing a lot of bragging. IMO Epic will be the ongoing leader,they are a brilliant developer and technical operation.It is just too bad they are not into making MMORPG's,i guess they really don't have the time to commit long term to a great game design. I do not see anyone at all breaking ground before Epic,we will see tons of cheap games pop up no question about it.Every new peripheral that coems along,somebody gets rich off it because it is NEW.Then media starts telling us how great it is and they are making millions,all the while not telling you about all the devs that fail and lose their shirt. IMO EVERYTHING we see for several years will be cheap products,fast designs ,like one year max,small teams like 30 or so and small budgets like less than 5 million. http://www.youtube.com/user/Napolianboo#p/u/15/rCYLLQCNc1w |
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12/26/12 3:23:46 PM#35
I think this conversation is a little confused, let me try to explain.
Tablets will not technically replace PC MMOs. That is not realistic. HOWEVER, the market is currently tapping into a large demographic that is fairly new (in that it some what was unknown) the 'casual' market. Could the industry as a whole start moving games to other non-PC devices by creating games that dont require as much processing power while at the same time reducing the amount of what we call AAA games?
absolutely does your game have rainbow sprinkles and magic ponies!? |
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12/26/12 3:32:24 PM#36
Originally posted by Roguewiz Consoles are closed platforms, which means you can't run anything on them unless it's approved by whoever controls the platform. PCs (whether Windows, Mac, or Linux) are open platforms, which means you can run whatever you want. At the moment, tablets are mixed, with iOS and Windows RT as closed platforms while Google Android is an open platform. There is a place for both in the world, and they're not interchangeable. Consoles can't move to being open platforms, as being a closed platform is their very reason to exist. Closed platform means piracy is much, much harder to do. Games need robust anti-piracy measures if they want to make any money. The only two anti-piracy measures that people have come up with that actually work are putting your game on a closed platform or requiring a constant Internet connection to play the game at all. The latter is a problem for single-player games, especially when people want to be able to play without needing an active Internet connection. That's why single-player games mostly stick to closed platforms. Meanwhile, online games have the Internet connection requirement built in and have no need for closed platforms as an anti-piracy measure. Furthermore, online games want open platforms, as that lets you update the game whenever you want, and without paying a large cut of your revenue to whoever controls the platform in order to get them to let your game run. That's why MMORPGs on closed platforms are still very rare. That's why it's highly probable that we'll see more MMORPGs made for Google Android than for iOS, PlayStation 4, XBox 720, and Wii U added together. |
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12/26/12 3:40:23 PM#37
Originally posted by Quizzical XPS 12 Ultrabook™ met Touch. i5 and i7 version
Think we going to see more of these type of Ultra books the coming years, it's definitly not going to take another 15 to 20 years to reach today's level of pc gaming on tablet. But to answer OP's question about "will a tablet era ruin PC gaming" Perhaps one day it will. I can see it already before me in my mind, have a docking station with a high end graphics card, powersupply and a slide to place your tablet in. The tablet funtions are mainly a mainboard and CPU, the onboard graphicscard shuts off when in slide mode and the high end card in your docking stations turns on. Docking stations could be upgradable....ahh just letting my imagination run wild here.... It just will not happen in the comming few years, laptops have not replaced pc's even thought they also are cappable to run high end games on high end graphics. Commercially speaking I also think that plugging in a tablet in some sort of docking station to be able to play high end games on your 60" tv screen is much "cooler" to do then plug in your laptop on that same tv. Imagining my docking station that is. |
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12/26/12 3:40:56 PM#38
Originally posted by Darrgen While I do think we'll see a lot more laptop/tablet hybrids as the coming year brings a lot more tablets with performance that would be acceptable for a low end laptop, I don't think that's going to come anywhere near replacing laptops. A tablet means that all of your functional hardware has to fit in a very small space, and right behind the monitor, which doesn't like to get terribly hot. The amount of performance you can get in a chip with a tablet-friendly 5 W TDP trails way behind what you can get in a 35 W TDP that fits comfortably in a laptop. What you can stick in the keyboard dock side of a hybrid device is somewhat limited. A loose guideline is that if you can get it for a desktop in an external USB device, then you could put it in the keyboard dock of a hybrid device. Putting a keyboard and trackpad there is easy, of course. I don't think that putting a battery or more storage (whether a hard drive or SSD) on the keyboard dock side would be all that difficult. Putting a more powerful CPU and GPU in the keyboard dock for use when the device is used as a laptop rather than a tablet would probably mean that you have to duplicate much of the hardware on both sides. It would be a nifty device, but that's cost++;, and it's not going to be especially portable. |
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12/26/12 3:41:54 PM#39
Originally posted by adeptuz This is how I view tablet games too. Tablets are a pretty cool invention but I can't find any use for them personally. My phone does everything I need from a mobile computer. "How should I know if it works? That's what beta testers are for. I only coded it." |
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12/26/12 3:46:05 PM#40
Originally posted by Reklaw A 17 W TDP in a tablet is a bad idea. Trying to dissipate that much heat safely adds tremendously to the cost, which is why the device you link to starts at $1200 and goes up from there. It's not going to be terribly portable as tablets, go, either. ----- Another cost advantage of laptops over tablets is this: what do you want to happen if a memory chip fails? In a tablet or ultrabook, you have to replace the whole thing outright. In a normal laptop, you can go buy a different memory module to replace the one that failed. The same is true for storage, or if you later decide that you want to upgrade memory or storage. |
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