(edited by Arenion.9603)
What are your PC Builds for Guild Wars 2?
People still didn’t get it that, unless they’re working on some ultra-new virtual graphic generators ( used by e.g. architects ), they will not need 16 gb of RAM in the nearest future ( a couple of years at least ).
It amazes me, really…
That was the point of building this computer. To make it extremely powerful and to future proof it for a good amount of time. Is there something wrong with that? Especially when ram is one of the cheapest things on the rig.
Cush…
In the old days MBs and OSs could not address or access memory above a certain limit, in today’s world of multi-tasking, multi-threading, multi-core multi-virtuial machine systems that isn’t a problem, case in point, my wife likes to work in photoshop, corel draw, and illustrator all at the same time when working on a project both of the Adobe programs are resource hogs and while Corel isn’t as demanding it isn’t a slouch either.
While running any one of these programs by itself 8g is more than adequate, open all three and try to get anything productive done is frustrating to say the least, granted there are more factors here than just memory pool size, allocation, and usage, graphics program need well really good graphics, quick hard drives (for scratch disks), lots of processing power and a large memory pool, she does do some 3D rendering in Maya which is probably the most intense app she runs which they only recommend 8g of ram also, but open it along side the other products all running at the same time …..well in a 8g system it isn’t pretty or productive unless you like waiting.
Bottom line….I like to play GW2, so much so that I have ran Premier rendering video to Encore and let Encore author a DVD while playing GW2 which stresses my system I don’t believe I could have the processes running in the background, render video and play GW2 on a 8g system without problems but I’ve never tried it either.
As you say RAM is one of the cheapest upgrades you can add to a computer not as cheap as a just a year ago but still if your building for the future (which we all do) why not add in capacity that may not be used today but when Win9 comes out and can address 128g of RAM (hypothetical) you’ll be ahead of the game, everyone who builds there own PC has a goal or objective in mind, software they know they will be running but the demands of future software are an unknown so if you build, built the biggest and baddest PC you can comfortably afford but don’t scrimp on the power supply.
You definitely need SSD in there,it’s so much better.Just get a 128GB one for windows and heavy games/apps,i’d recommend a samsung 840.
(edited by Arenion.9603)
question for all of you who are running Windows 8… does this game actually run smoothly on Windows 8? I heard that because Windows 8 is so similar to an App based system such as Android and the iPhone OS, that it may not be compatible with a game such as Guild Wars 2. Is this true or is there a way to get Windows 8 to run Guild Wars 2? I ask because I would very much like to get an upgraded Computer that runs Windows 8, but not if it means I can’t run this game or another game of my choosing because of incompatibility issues with the OS.
Ranger 80 | Elementalist 30 | Guardian 29 | Necromancer 21
People still didn’t get it that, unless they’re working on some ultra-new virtual graphic generators ( used by e.g. architects ), they will not need 16 gb of RAM in the nearest future ( a couple of years at least ).
It amazes me, really…
That was the point of building this computer. To make it extremely powerful and to future proof it for a good amount of time. Is there something wrong with that? Especially when ram is one of the cheapest things on the rig.
Cush…
In the old days MBs and OSs could not address or access memory above a certain limit, in today’s world of multi-tasking, multi-threading, multi-core multi-virtuial machine systems that isn’t a problem, case in point, my wife likes to work in photoshop, corel draw, and illustrator all at the same time when working on a project both of the Adobe programs are resource hogs and while Corel isn’t as demanding it isn’t a slouch either.
While running any one of these programs by itself 8g is more than adequate, open all three and try to get anything productive done is frustrating to say the least, granted there are more factors here than just memory pool size, allocation, and usage, graphics program need well really good graphics, quick hard drives (for scratch disks), lots of processing power and a large memory pool, she does do some 3D rendering in Maya which is probably the most intense app she runs which they only recommend 8g of ram also, but open it along side the other products all running at the same time …..well in a 8g system it isn’t pretty or productive unless you like waiting.
Bottom line….I like to play GW2, so much so that I have ran Premier rendering video to Encore and let Encore author a DVD while playing GW2 which stresses my system I don’t believe I could have the processes running in the background, render video and play GW2 on a 8g system without problems but I’ve never tried it either.
As you say RAM is one of the cheapest upgrades you can add to a computer not as cheap as a just a year ago but still if your building for the future (which we all do) why not add in capacity that may not be used today but when Win9 comes out and can address 128g of RAM (hypothetical) you’ll be ahead of the game, everyone who builds there own PC has a goal or objective in mind, software they know they will be running but the demands of future software are an unknown so if you build, built the biggest and baddest PC you can comfortably afford but don’t scrimp on the power supply.
Agreed haha. The reason I only have a 700w power supply was not intentional. I had planned for a much more powerful one in the high dollar range but the reason it came down to this one was because I had just received my first part to my rig (my GPU) and I really wanted to put it in my fathers kittenty PC as he was running with an integraded HD graphics card, old gigabyte mobo, 4gb ram, 300w power supply, etc. You get the picture. I wanted to finally play a game with a better frame rate on a higher graphic setting than very low.
So, that high dollar power supply that I wanted kinda went out the window at that point because I wanted better fps and graphics now. Not later, now :p. So instead of saving up an extra $100 and ordering online I ran over to PC Brokers and got a power supply that was 100w over the minimum for my GPU which barely, and I mean barely by like one more millimeter the GPU wouldn’t fit barely, got it fit into my fathers kittenty PC haha. This has held me over until I finish purchasing everything here shortly.
Now this doesn’t mean I won’t be upgrading my power supply but like I said, I want to complete my rig now and play it now, so I’m definitely not going to purchase the power supply next or before I put all the pieces together and play some games on it but it probably will be one of the first things I purchase once I have it together.
Cush
question for all of you who are running Windows 8… does this game actually run smoothly on Windows 8? I heard that because Windows 8 is so similar to an App based system such as Android and the iPhone OS, that it may not be compatible with a game such as Guild Wars 2. Is this true or is there a way to get Windows 8 to run Guild Wars 2? I ask because I would very much like to get an upgraded Computer that runs Windows 8, but not if it means I can’t run this game or another game of my choosing because of incompatibility issues with the OS.
Windows 8 is completely fine for gaming. This isn’t Vista Check this link out, I kinda have this opinion.
http://gizmodo.com/5937590/youre-being-lied-to-windows-8-isnt-bad-for-gaming
Windows 8.1
I7 6-core (#??) @ 4.325 Ghz
32GB @ 2.333 GHz (should fix this)
256GB Raid0 SSD (two cards)
TWO nVidia GTX770 4GB (SLI)
1500W PS
1. Windows 8.1 runs MUCH faster with GW2 than Win7 did
2. SLI on/off makes a big difference – GW2 does make use of your video card
3. GW2 uses all CPU cores, it is a multithreaded app
There is so much hearsay and outright incorrect statements about the game architecture and OS.
Graphics settings:
nVidia GW2 profile (make sure SLI is on)
Start max everything, go through each, don’t go by the best drop down setting.
1. Camera shake off
2. Super sampling ON
3. Environment ULTRA
4. Shadows -> medium to off to your taste, this has a huge impact in performance
Essentially shadows is all I will adjust to perk up the frame rate on a heavily populated map, when the frame rate goes below 30.
Usually 50+ FPS peak 120 FPS.
Running on a fifty five inch 1080p @ 60Hz
If I turn on frame rate limiting (to 60), the jet plane fans calm down but I will get some horizontal image warping when moving the camera around a lot.
Windows 8.1
I7 6-core (#??) @ 4.325 Ghz
32GB @ 2.333 GHz (should fix this)
256GB Raid0 SSD (two cards)
TWO nVidia GTX770 4GB (SLI)
1500W PS1. Windows 8.1 runs MUCH faster with GW2 than Win7 did
2. SLI on/off makes a big difference – GW2 does make use of your video card
3. GW2 uses all CPU cores, it is a multithreaded appThere is so much hearsay and outright incorrect statements about the game architecture and OS.
Graphics settings:
nVidia GW2 profile (make sure SLI is on)
Start max everything, go through each, don’t go by the best drop down setting.
1. Camera shake off
2. Super sampling ON
3. Environment ULTRA
4. Shadows -> medium to off to your taste, this has a huge impact in performanceEssentially shadows is all I will adjust to perk up the frame rate on a heavily populated map, when the frame rate goes below 30.
Usually 50+ FPS peak 120 FPS.
Running on a fifty five inch 1080p @ 60Hz
If I turn on frame rate limiting (to 60), the jet plane fans calm down but I will get some horizontal image warping when moving the camera around a lot.
You’re running two 4gb 770’s? So 8gb total? If so, that’s a little excessive haha. I have heard of a lot of problems with people running sli though. One card is really your best option from what I’ve heard. Correct me if I’m wrong but ive heard of micro stuttering and all sorts of stuff when it comes to using sli for two cards. That’s the main reason why I didn’t purchase a second 770 2gb which I was originally going to.
I had an SLi system and it wasn’t all it was cracked up to be. SLi and Crossfire, while touted as “ultra gaming” hardware isn’t all that great tbh. Many games refuse to run correctly in SLi / CF modes, additional profile data is often required, the actual performance gains are lower than you would expect and its bloody expensive. I cant remember off the top of my head but iirc its something like per card extra its is only a 1.5x increase in performance (rather than the 2x you would expect from 2 cards).
The smart money is on one high-end card.
I had an SLi system and it wasn’t all it was cracked up to be. SLi and Crossfire, while touted as “ultra gaming” hardware isn’t all that great tbh. Many games refuse to run correctly in SLi / CF modes, additional profile data is often required, the actual performance gains are lower than you would expect and its bloody expensive. I cant remember off the top of my head but iirc its something like per card extra its is only a 1.5x increase in performance (rather than the 2x you would expect from 2 cards).
The smart money is on one high-end card.
The idea is too buy the High End card and in a few years when you are looking for a cheap performance boost buy the same card for 1/3 (or less of the price) and go SLI/Crossfire.
“…let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we shall die;.”
But its not as cheap a boost though, because you need a PSU to handle two cards and those don’t come that cheap for a quality one. So you can easily end up spending the price of a newer more powerful card just on the second older model card and a psu to handle them both.
Its smarter to just get a newer card, and sell on the old one if possible.
Fyi when you SLI/CF two cards they only use the total memory of one card.
Also Lexandro,normally you anticipate if you are gonna SLI/CF or not so you pick up a PSU that gives you the headroom,which costs you like 30$ extra.
All that said SLI/CF can be funky in different games,but if all works properly you normally get a 1,8x performance(depends on the GPU though),some games that are optimized for it can actually achieve 95-100% increase,but it’s a gamble and probably, 50% of the cases you’ll be running single-GPU to get rid of issues that can occur.
On another note though,don’t go above 2-way SLI/CF since you just start getting diminishing returns
(edited by Arenion.9603)
CAS: Cooler Master Elite 431 w/ USB 3.0, Side Panel Window
CASUPGRADE: None
CD: 24X Double Layer Dual Format DVD+-R/-RW + CD-R/RW Drive (BLACK COLOR)
CD2: None
COOLANT: Standard Coolant
CPU: AMD FX-6300 3.50 GHz Six-Core AM3 CPU 6MB L2 Cache & Turbo Core Technology
CS_FAN: Default case fans
ENGRAVING: None
FA_HDD: None
FAN: Asetek 510LC 120mm Liquid Cooling CPU Cooler – Enhance Cooling Performance (Single Standard 120MM Fan)
FLASHMEDIA: INTERNAL 12in1 Flash Media Reader/Writer (BLACK COLOR)
FREEBIE_MB: None
FREEBIE_VC2: None
HDD: 1TB SATA-III 6.0Gb/s 32MB Cache 7200RPM HDD (Single Drive)
HDD2: None
HEADSET: ZALMAN ZM-HPS200 GAMING HEADSET 0]
IUSB: Built-in USB 2.0 Ports
KEYBOARD: (Keyboard & Mouse Combo) Cooler Master Storm Devastator Gaming Keyboard & Mouse Combo [0]
MEMORY: 8GB (4GBx2) DDR3/1866MHz Dual Channel Memory 37] (ADATA XPG V2)
MONITOR: None
MONITOR2: None
MONITOR3: None
MOTHERBOARD: GIGABYTE 970A-DS3P AMD 970 ATX w/ Ultra Durable 4 Classic, On/Off Charge, GbLAN, 2 PCIe x16, 3 PCIe x1, 2 PCI
MOUSE: None [0]
NETWORK: Onboard Gigabit LAN Network
OS: Microsoft® Windows 8.1 (64-bit Edition) + Office 365 FREE 30 Days Trial
OVERCLOCK: No Overclocking
POWERSUPPLY: 500 Watts – EVGA 80 PLUS Bronze Certified Power Supply 16]
RUSH: NO; READY TO SHIP IN 5~10 BUSINESS DAYS
SERVICE: STANDARD WARRANTY: 3-YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY PLUS LIFE-TIME TECHNICAL SUPPORT
SOUND: HIGH DEFINITION ON-BOARD 7.1 AUDIO
SPEAKERS: None
TABLET1: None [0]
TEMP: None
TVRC: None
USBFLASH: None
USBHD: None
USBX: None
VIDEO: AMD Radeon R9 270X 2GB GDDR5 16X PCIe 3.0 Video Card [+68] (Major Brand Powered by AMD)
Built last year. Run the game at 2560×1440 without any problems and solid frame rate. Very modestly overclocked.
INTEL I7-3930K 3.2GHZ
256GB OCZ AGILITY 4 SATA III SSD
3TB 7200RPM SATA III 6.0GB/S 64MB CACHE
THERMALTAKE CHASER MK-1 FULL TOWER GAMING CASE
BLACK LG 14X BLU-RAY REWRITER
BLACK SAMSUNG 24X DVDRW
GIGABYTE PCI-E 802.11 B/G/N + BLUETOOTH
GIGABYTE X79-UP4 QUAD CROSSFIRE/ QUAD SLI SATA 3.0 USB 3.0 LGA 2011
WINDOWS 8 PRO (Haven’t upgraded to 8.1 yet.)
HIS ICQ AMD RADEON 7970 3GB PCIE
32GB CORSAIR VENGEANCE 1866MHZ DDR3
THERMALTAKE CLW0216 WATER 2.0 PRO LIQUID COOLING KIT
COOLERMASTER SILENT PRO 1000W POWER SUPPLY
(edited by Henri Blanche.8276)
People still didn’t get it that, unless they’re working on some ultra-new virtual graphic generators ( used by e.g. architects ), they will not need 16 gb of RAM in the nearest future ( a couple of years at least ).
It amazes me, really…
That was the point of building this computer. To make it extremely powerful and to future proof it for a good amount of time. Is there something wrong with that? Especially when ram is one of the cheapest things on the rig.
Cush…
In the old days MBs and OSs could not address or access memory above a certain limit, in today’s world of multi-tasking, multi-threading, multi-core multi-virtuial machine systems that isn’t a problem, case in point, my wife likes to work in photoshop, corel draw, and illustrator all at the same time when working on a project both of the Adobe programs are resource hogs and while Corel isn’t as demanding it isn’t a slouch either.
While running any one of these programs by itself 8g is more than adequate, open all three and try to get anything productive done is frustrating to say the least, granted there are more factors here than just memory pool size, allocation, and usage, graphics program need well really good graphics, quick hard drives (for scratch disks), lots of processing power and a large memory pool, she does do some 3D rendering in Maya which is probably the most intense app she runs which they only recommend 8g of ram also, but open it along side the other products all running at the same time …..well in a 8g system it isn’t pretty or productive unless you like waiting.
Bottom line….I like to play GW2, so much so that I have ran Premier rendering video to Encore and let Encore author a DVD while playing GW2 which stresses my system I don’t believe I could have the processes running in the background, render video and play GW2 on a 8g system without problems but I’ve never tried it either.
As you say RAM is one of the cheapest upgrades you can add to a computer not as cheap as a just a year ago but still if your building for the future (which we all do) why not add in capacity that may not be used today but when Win9 comes out and can address 128g of RAM (hypothetical) you’ll be ahead of the game, everyone who builds there own PC has a goal or objective in mind, software they know they will be running but the demands of future software are an unknown so if you build, built the biggest and baddest PC you can comfortably afford but don’t scrimp on the power supply.
one core can still use 4GB RAM maximum. You would know if you studied computer architecture. Its because the length of an instruction in the instruction set.
So, that high dollar power supply that I wanted kinda went out the window at that point because I wanted better fps and graphics now. Not later, now :p. So instead of saving up an extra $100 and ordering online I ran over to PC Brokers and got a power supply that was 100w over the minimum for my GPU which barely, and I mean barely by like one more millimeter the GPU wouldn’t fit barely, got it fit into my fathers kittenty PC haha. This has held me over until I finish purchasing everything here shortly.
Now this doesn’t mean I won’t be upgrading my power supply but like I said, I want to complete my rig now and play it now, so I’m definitely not going to purchase the power supply next or before I put all the pieces together and play some games on it but it probably will be one of the first things I purchase once I have it together.
Cush
Understandable…. something every system builder should have is a watt meter like this http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16882715001 small in cost but long in value testing the wattage draw of a new PC, it’ll give you a idea before any damage is done if your PS is of sufficient capacity to not only power your GPU but the MB/CPU combo along with the cooler, case fans and everything else the PS is running. In today’s world of 100w+ CPU’s figuring your total wattage demand inside the case is very important IMHO.
one core can still use 4GB RAM maximum. You would know if you studied computer architecture. Its because the length of an instruction in the instruction set.
Thank you Sir…. I have only a layman’s knowledge of CPU architecture and being old I’ve forgotten a lot about how data flows and instructions are processed, but for a quad core processor it would seem 16g of memory would be max that could be accessed and the newer 8 core CPUs would be 32g is this correct? One other question if you don’t mind in the new 4 channel MBs does that change it would seem that it would not but only provide a wider path.
TIA
Main account + PC
- Motherboard – Asus Z87 Sabertooth
- CPU – i7 4770k
- Memory – Corsair Vengeance 4×4GB DDR3
- GPU – eVGA GTX 770 4GB Classified edition
- Storage – SanDisk 240 GB SSD, WD Caviar Black 500GB HDD
- Power supply – eVGA SuperNOVA 750w modular
- Chassis – Fractal R4 Titanium w/window
Alt account + PC
- Motherboard – ASUS P6X58D-E
- CPU – i7 950
- Memory – Mushkin 2×4GB DDR3
- GPU – Sapphire HD6870 1GB
- Storage – WD Caviar Black 1TB
- Power supply – Corsair TX650w non-modular
- Chassis – Coolermaster CM 690 II
Shared components:
- Display – 2x 21.5" 1080p monitors (dedicated 1 per computer)
- Keyboard – Steelseries 6G V2
- Mouse – Razer Naga Hex
Step up
[LOD]
Pentium III 450mhz
PC130 RAM – 100mhz (32MB)
Canopus RIVA TNT2 Ultra (Graphics Card, PCI) 32mb ram
150watt PSU
Windows 98SE
You’re running two 4gb 770’s? So 8gb total? If so, that’s a little excessive haha. I have heard of a lot of problems with people running sli though. One card is really your best option from what I’ve heard. Correct me if I’m wrong but ive heard of micro stuttering and all sorts of stuff when it comes to using sli for two cards. That’s the main reason why I didn’t purchase a second 770 2gb which I was originally going to.
It doesn’t work that way. Running SLI with 2 4gb cards doesn’t double up to 8gb. It’s limited to 4gb.