Anonymous
11 years agoBf4 graphics cards
I'm getting a new pc and it comes with either an AMD Radeon R7 240 graphics card or a different computer with a AMD HD 8570D. Which one is better and are they both really good? I really need to know r...
Answer to the first question is here: http://lmgtfy.com/?q=geforce+gtx+750+ti+2gb+battlefield+4+benchmark
And no, flash drives are not suitable for storing and running games. You can install the game on an SSD (which uses some of the same technology) but it will only make your game load faster, not run faster when it has actually loaded.
I cannot use the words i wanna
"Nvidia sux with frostbitE " Theroyetically we are speaking those might be my words, but if i hammer sumthing to much i just feel like a fanboy. Just google any Nvidia card you are looking at + Battlefield crash , ATI is on the box for a reason.
Stay away from Sapphire, there cards are dire now totally. I have a MSI card, it handles the things i do to it pretty well. RAM you need to look at least at 16gb or you will bottleneck the 64bit app if you dont work on windows before u play (ill be updatin a guide on this soon) All the best in your consumer decision. High end ATI , throw money at them , what could go wrong.
@Sindalore wrote:
Yep alright I'm getting a computer with these specs. Can you tell me if they are al good?
128GB SSD- what is that?
Yes looks great for your needs. Several years you can replace the GPU with whatever is middle-tier at that time and it'll go for another couple years I'd guess-ti-mate.
The SSD is where you install your Operating System and a few games.
The Hard Drive is where you install lesser used games and all your data (Pictures, videos, etc etc).
Keep the SSD clean, only OS, essential programs (browsers, small tools, etc), and the games you play most frequently. Keep it atleast ~30% free for best use.
SSD = Super Fast but not to much space compared to a HD
HD = Slow compared to SSD, fine for most things even games... some games can benefit more than others (i.e. load times, texture loading)
SSD makes your system feel very quick and snappy. For games it isn't that big of a deal but it certainly can help in some cases. Personally I have several SSDs and several HDs... each have a purpose as described above.
(Every laptop, game system, computer (minus firewall) in my house has atleast 1 SSD.. I've been on SSDs since the dreaded first generation of them, that cost a bucket of money, failed frequently, no TRIM, and poor performance compared to today's SSDs).