- Joined
- Jul 25, 2008
- Messages
- 13,978 (2.35/day)
- Location
- Louisiana
Processor | Core i9-9900k |
---|---|
Motherboard | ASRock Z390 Phantom Gaming 6 |
Cooling | All air: 2x140mm Fractal exhaust; 3x 140mm Cougar Intake; Enermax ETS-T50 Black CPU cooler |
Memory | 32GB (2x16) Mushkin Redline DDR-4 3200 |
Video Card(s) | ASUS RTX 4070 Ti Super OC 16GB |
Storage | 1x 1TB MX500 (OS); 2x 6TB WD Black; 1x 2TB MX500; 1x 1TB BX500 SSD; 1x 6TB WD Blue storage (eSATA) |
Display(s) | Infievo 27" 165Hz @ 2560 x 1440 |
Case | Fractal Design Define R4 Black -windowed |
Audio Device(s) | Soundblaster Z |
Power Supply | Seasonic Focus GX-1000 Gold |
Mouse | Coolermaster Sentinel III (large palm grip!) |
Keyboard | Logitech G610 Orion mechanical (Cherry Brown switches) |
Software | Windows 10 Pro 64-bit (Start10 & Fences 3.0 installed) |
I wrote about this aspect in What Are You Playing, but feel it bears noting here on the benchmark thread.
The fog is exceptional in this game. It shifts and moves in increasing and decreasing volumes with uncanny realism. I’ve lived and travelled in multiple places around the world. Other than some of the fog in the UK, the fog during winter down here in the vicinity of New Orleans is some of the worst I have seen.
22 years of commuting in it has me very familiar with its almost living properties. The way it moves and shifts shadows and visuals is replicated perfectly in the swampy waterways in the game in East Anglia and vicinity.
The fog is exceptional in this game. It shifts and moves in increasing and decreasing volumes with uncanny realism. I’ve lived and travelled in multiple places around the world. Other than some of the fog in the UK, the fog during winter down here in the vicinity of New Orleans is some of the worst I have seen.
22 years of commuting in it has me very familiar with its almost living properties. The way it moves and shifts shadows and visuals is replicated perfectly in the swampy waterways in the game in East Anglia and vicinity.