Reply 400 of 454, by SScorpio
RetroPCCupboard wrote on 2025-01-04, 16:46:Hopefully once you upgrade the CPU, the performance will be what you want.
People have rose colored glasses when they think back on the hardware they used to use or a friend or family member had and they played on it occasionally. 3D games ran at 15-20fps, and the Voodoo magic might be a smooth 30fps experience. We're spoiled nowadays with people seeing 60fps as a minimum and wanting 100+fps.
But IMO running through the various upgrade paths to try to chase the envisioned performance rarely does more than put a hole in one's wallet especially when looking at the highest performing models that everyone chases. You just end up going through a deep dive of the chaos of a rapidly changing market.
If you want an experience of a certain build, you'll get that warts and all. Generally buying entry to mid range level hardware from a generation after where you are looking will net you the performance you were chasing, but on hardware that people aren't overspending on. The only thing to check is compatibility with games and feature sets you want to play.