First post, by TheAbandonwareGuy
- Rank
- Oldbie
With Windows 10, Newer Video Cards, and similar things constantly breaking older games from say 2006-2009 I have begun to wonder if the age where a machine built to spec for this era has finally arrived out of neccesity. You can't even get the older Securom and Safedisk games working on Windows 10 due to it intentionally breaking support for there driver level stuff. So many of my favorites arrived in this era and I'm afraid sooner rather than later my "Modern" PC won't run it. I'm actually wondering how many of my installed games from that era will run on my new R9 290 when it gets back from RMA. I'm currently using a GTX 750Ti and I already find myself switching PhysX drivers and DLL's out on a fairly regular basis and I often find that some settings that ran fine with older drivers on the same card cause games to crash, stutter, or completely lock up. I feel like eventually, very soon, we will see a compatibility break thats serious enough to neccesate this something esque to what happened around the GeForceFX-6000 transition with older Windows 98 games.
What would a high end PC from this time zone entail you may ask? Well, heres my take:
OS - Windows Vista 64-bit
Capable PSU - 500w Silver/Gold
Fast Intel Dualcore - Intel Core2Duo E8400
Fast ATX Mobo - 680i SLI or Intel P4x
Fast DDR2 - 4GB DDR2 1066
SLI/CFX Video - 9800GX2/4850x2
Small SSD Boot - 80GB SSD
Large Game disk - 500GB 7200RPM HDD
Non LED LCD - 4:3 1600x1200
Optical - DVD-RW
Controller - Higher end XB360 controller (Thrustmaster, etc)
What do you guys think? Should we all be stockpiling Core2Duos or is my panic unfounded?
RetroEra: Retro Gaming Podcast and Community: https://discord.gg/kezaTvzH3Q
Cyb3rst0rm's Retro Hardware Warzone: https://discord.gg/naTwhZVMay
I used to own over 160 graphics card, I've since recovered from graphics card addiction