Saturday, February 23, 2008

WoW: Will the Updates Ever End?

Does anyone else have trouble keeping their computer up to par?

Current World of Warcraft System Requirements

"The World of Warcraft system requirements are impressive. World of Warcraft requires a large amount of memory, hard drive space and, above all, a solid internet connection.

For a Windows system, the minimum World of Warcraft system requirements are as follows:

- Intel Pentium III 800 MHz or AMD Athlon 800 MHz processor

- at least 512 MB of RAM,

- 32 MB graphics card,

- DirectX 9.0,

- 6.0 GB of hard drive space

- 4x CD-ROM

- 56k internet connection.

However, the recommended World of Warcraft system requirements are substantially higher:

- Intel Pentium IV 1.5 GHz or AMD XP 1500+ MHz processor

- 1024 MB of RAM

- 64 MB 3D graphics card

- broadband internet connection

- A two-button, scroll-wheel mouse is also recommended.

Millions of players connect daily to the World of Warcraft servers, and the amount of information being transferred from any one computer to the main terminals is enormous. But with all of these numbers and with all of these devices, frequent gamers know they will need to go above the minimal system requirements to experience the game fully. The minimal World of Warcraft system requirements only guarantee the game to run; they do not guarantee the game to run in a playable fashion.

There are some other known issues to keep in mind

- Some video cards may experience problems displaying certain textural effects while playing. Graphic issues may include colors shimmering across static textures, textures that appear solid green or white, and patches of texture or even geometry that are invisible.

- World of Warcraft/Burning Crusade requires the latest version of DirectX.

- Also, it is important that your video drivers are up-to-date and compatible with the latest version of DirectX. Outdated or incompatible video drivers can cause a variety of video and game play issues.

Something else you should keep in mind is that World of Warcraft had multiple expansion packs and down-loadable patches and these are also a factor into the World of Warcraft system requirements. Overtime, the specifications have shifted, and will keep shifting in the future; what was once acceptable to run the original game is no longer adequate for some expansions and patches. This will force players to upgrade their computers, if they wish to run the latest versions of the game. Gamers really have no choice; in order to compete, they must have the latest World of Warcraft software and a system that meets at least the recommended requirements; otherwise, you will keep stumbling around."

Jenny Cumbersome plays online games as if here live depends on it. http://www.onlinegamesurvival.com

Has anyone else had the unfortunate experience of being short changed on the dividing of the goods following an encounter? All because of a slow computer/connection?

And yet we continue to play... crippled.....alone...

Cheater's Never Prosper...Right?

UP, DOWN, UP, DOWN, LEFT, RIGHT, LEFT, RIGHT, A, B, A, B

Many are familiar with that directional letter sequence. It is the code of the classic old school gamer. It is the secret handshake of the remnants of a foundational gaming age gone by (please, someone post if you have beaten Contra without the infinite life boost). There are fond memories from my childhood with myself discovering a cheat and passing it along like currency to other youngsters.

Today is different. Today there are those who would challenge the morality of such "cheats." Listen to this:

"Most serious video and computer gamers spend many hours trying to learn the tips, tricks and cheats in order to win their video games. What in essence they are trying to do is manipulate the computer system in order to win or score more points in the videogame.
This is unfortunate because perhaps we are teaching our children our teenagers that cheating is acceptable. Cheating in the real world is not acceptable and therefore we should not teach them how to do it in a make-believe virtual-reality world.
The video games should be in fact penalized for cheating and therefore along the way the teenagers who plays video games will learn that cheating is not good. We have too many teenagers cheating on their tests and research papers in school."
-Lance (not to be confused with Carl) Winslow- expert author @ www.WorldThinkTank.net

Cmon, PC Police, perhaps this is taking it a bit far!!!

After my Street Fighter 2 victory, my brother was prone to destructive violent outbursts. Screaming "unfair," he would challenge my hundred hand slap without variation.

Fast forward to the NOW. In my opponent's box, if I see a sniper's scope focused on my Master Chief I will juke and dance like a madman. If my opponent doesnt do the same - HE IS A DOPE.

I am a law abiding citizen. I am a product of a cheating revolution.

In the real world, we play by their rules. In a game- ANYTHING GOES as far as Im concerned.v

Just a warning.