- Joined
- Mar 29, 2007
- Messages
- 4,838 (0.75/day)
System Name | Aquarium |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9 7950x |
Motherboard | ROG Strix X670-E |
Cooling | Lian Li Galahead 360 AIO |
Memory | 2x16gb Flare X5 Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR5-6000 PC5-48000 |
Video Card(s) | Asus RTX 3060 |
Storage | 2TB WD SN850X Black NVMe, 500GB Samsung 970 NVMe |
Display(s) | Gigabyte 32" IPS 144Hz |
Case | Hyte Y60 |
Power Supply | Corsair RMx 850 |
Software | Win 11 Pro/ PopOS! |
Listen man, when I buy a PC game I play it on my Windows machine. That's why I have a Windows machine. When I do school work I use my Macbook. I have no bias... I use each for a purpose.
I'm just stating that yes it is easily possible for someone to play ANY Windows game on a Mac.
What do you need more power for? Gaming or school work? But which one cost you more? I love Mac OS X I really do, I just hate Mac (I'm a big bang/buck kind of guy).
I know it's possible but thanks for trying to educate me. Mac's graphics cards don't look so good once you try to game, and I don't consider an bootcamp +windows to be effective.
I have no idea how much I paid way back when, but it has been used on my Athlon XP, 3 upgrades, and then my A64 system, and now my C2D. It could be considered free.
Right now as a student all I'm doing is mainly programming and the occasional Youtube video.
And I have a desktop. You might be interested in knowing I travel a lot, so a desktop is not acceptable for a workstation. Hence why I have a Macbook pro.
What I'm saying is, if you're so worried about power enough to pay that much for a laptop you'd hope it'd play a game or two. If not (or doing the other things I mentioned), a much cheaper workstation would do just as well.
Work it out however you like, Windows retail should cost about $200 + $50-60 for boot camp, hence what I said.