Sasukekun wrote:
So, that's something.[font=Proxima, sans-serif]The accuracy of this approach doesn't precisely pinpoint the end result, though we do see Dead Rising 3 and Crimson Dragon struggling to sustain 30FPS under such conditions. This at least reveals each studio's attempts to demonstrate realistic results without the actual hardware to hand, rather than showing off overly flattering ones using unbounded specs.[/font]
There was a bunch of twittering and the like about game demo pods crashing to win7 HP desktops.Plan M wrote:...What the fuck? Is this confirmed as true?
It's not out yet, give it chance.Mod74 wrote:It's not unreasonable to see 3rd party devs not having actual kit do demonstrate on when it was only revealed three weeks ago. Once they do get it they can start to properly optimise. TBH I'm not expecting great things from all games out of the gate on either. It's taken years to fine tune 360/PS4 games and engines to get the most from them. If you want to see screen tearing have a look at the first Dead Rising. That was more tear than screen.
Gonzo wrote:Mm, that's a bit subpar right there. I think he rolled a two.
djchump wrote:There was a bunch of twittering and the like about game demo pods crashing to win7 HP desktops. http://www.cinemablend.com/games/Xbox-One-Games-E3-Were-Running-Windows-7-With-Nvidia-GTX-Cards-56737.html AFAIK no-one has specifically stated which games those were - the DF article is probably the best/most reliable rundown TBH: http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/digitalfoundry-hands-on-with-xbox-onePlan M wrote:...What the fuck? Is this confirmed as true?
Coming out of E3, it's difficult to avoid the sense that Microsoft is not as prepared for its upcoming launch as it should be, especially in comparison to Sony, which was able to show all of its titles running on actual PlayStation hardware.
And yes, there were some games that were - categorically, without a shadow of a doubt - running on Xbox One hardware. It'll come as little surprise to learn that first party software was more likely to be showcased running on the new console, with Turn 10's Forza Motorsport 5 the most high profile title we saw that was visibly operating on the actual unit.
Coming out of E3, it's difficult to avoid the sense that Microsoft is not as prepared for its upcoming launch as it should be, especially in comparison to Sony, which was able to show all of its titles running on actual PlayStation hardware.
Fentonizer wrote:Internet is in full on pitchfork mode. Anything and everything will be used against XB1 at this point. If it were Sony, people would be bending over backwards to explain this away in the ways some people have in here, that's if it even made the news at all.
Mod74 wrote:The problem with using a PC to demo things at E3 is it's not real is it. The Xbox One has all sorts of custom chips and boards and stuff inside. It's not like the Xbox One is a mid range PC in a consumer focused box playing x86 games or something.
...wait.
Yossarian wrote:Also from the DF article:Coming out of E3, it's difficult to avoid the sense that Microsoft is not as prepared for its upcoming launch as it should be, especially in comparison to Sony, which was able to show all of its titles running on actual PlayStation hardware.
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