- Joined
- Feb 24, 2023
- Messages
- 3,027 (4.72/day)
- Location
- Russian Wild West
System Name | DLSS / YOLO-PC |
---|---|
Processor | i5-12400F / 10600KF |
Motherboard | Gigabyte B760M DS3H / Z490 Vision D |
Cooling | Laminar RM1 / Gammaxx 400 |
Memory | 32 GB DDR4-3200 / 16 GB DDR4-3333 |
Video Card(s) | RX 6700 XT / R9 380 2 GB |
Storage | A couple SSDs, m.2 NVMe included / 240 GB CX1 + 1 TB WD HDD |
Display(s) | Compit HA2704 / MSi G2712 |
Case | Matrexx 55 / Junkyard special |
Audio Device(s) | Want loud, use headphones. Want quiet, use satellites. |
Power Supply | Thermaltake 1000 W / Corsair CX650M / DQ550ST [backup] |
Mouse | Don't disturb, cheese eating in progress... |
Keyboard | Makes some noise. Probably onto something. |
VR HMD | I live in real reality and don't need a virtual one. |
Software | Windows 10 and 11 |
Where? I find it impossible to confuse real life with computer games, unless you're completely whacked. Not even close. Shadows, textures, reflections, they all behave not the same way.We already have realistic graphics
Not my fallacy. I love some games precisely for being far from representing reality. Fallout series, for example, have it way off but this is what makes the series even better. Same applies to Quake, Doom etc. These games are graphically the bee's knees.Its a fallacy to think you can get everything photorealistic and still have a pleasant gaming experience
RT is a great tool to master nonetheless.