Forum Discussion
IMO, you have the two subjects inverted. A normal Geforce has no trouble that way, nor does any kind of Radeon. Only the nVIDIA mobile video fails that way, constantly, in so very many of EA's games. That isn't at all solitary. Those cheap, undependable Mickey Mouse toys fail in MANY games, nearly all the time. I think that nVIDIA owes its customers a much better video product than they are providing.
- Anonymous10 years agoUmm... I have NVidia GeForce GT600 series... (don't know the exact number)
Anyway, is there a solution to my problem?- Anonymous10 years ago
If you had a proper game-playing computer, it would be stationary, not mobile, and the back of it would have two video ports, the right one, and the wrong one. Plugging the display into the bad port would be very easy to undo, just swap it.
Until laptops have any standard for various classes, they cannot be used to test games on, and system requirements cannot try to accommodate them. A Radeon mobile device is complete, unlike the cheap Optimus device from nVIDIA, which includes only a "back half", no front end.
You are stuck with digging through your drivers and graphics controls to take total control of all aspects, because the Optimus simply is too lazy and unreliable to do anything automatically in far too many games. Here's a discussion:
P. S. The Geforce 610, 620, and 630 are ranked from god-awful on the bottom, through absolutely terrible in the middle, to "still not good enough" on the top at GT 630.
- Anonymous10 years agoSo would buying a proper GPU (e.g. Radeon) help me,
or do I have to buy a desktop computer (which is probably very expensive) with two video ports?
Thank you for your feedback anyway!
About Star Wars Games Discussion
Recent Discussions
Make AIs more dangerous
Solved2 days ago