Serenity Lives

Serenity Lives

Yesterday was largely spent setting up a new machine, and with it comes the arbitrary logging in of various games to see how they perform on the new setup.  I should have said “new” in quotes because this system was absolutely another one of my craigslist wheeling and dealings.  Some time ago I saw a system that I was interested in, but I was simply not willing to pay what the guy was asking.  I made an offer, one significantly lower than he was wanting… but something in the range of what I would be comfortable with.  He initially sounded insulted but after a handful of texts went into the lengthy story of why he was parting with the machine.  It turns out he had just ordered all of the bits to assemble what he considered to be the ultimate gaming machine…  and then his wife got mad at him for doing it.  Firstly of note to any of my readers…. you should never purchase anything big without consulting your spouse first because you are just asking for trouble.  I told him that my offer was all that I was comfortable spending on that machine, and that the offer would stand.  Now we scan ahead roughly a month and a half, and I still have not purchased anything… and I receive a text out of the blue from the guy.  He apparently got no offers at all and was willing to drop down to my offer to move it quickly…  and by quickly I guess that means two months later?

The problem with me and a new machine is that I only really felt comfortable building it on Sunday after I finished up the podcast and made sure it was published.  That whole adage of the show must go on and such.  So I sat down a few weeks ago to get things built… only to realize that the power supply that he had in the machine was going to be completely inadequate.  I was swapping over the GeForce 980 that I had previously… which requires 2 8 pin power connectors.  The card he had in it was a r9 380 which required a single 8 pin power connector.  I can largely tell that he assembled this machine through PC Part Picker, and went with the bare minimum power supply the it said was compatible.  The end result was that the “ultimate gaming machine” had a Corsair 450 watt power supply in it, that I needed to upgrade into something that had dual 8 pin power connectors.  Being cheap like I am… I decided to just order something from Amazon rather than run out to Best Buy and pick something up that day.  Unfortunately the PSU that I ordered kept getting rescheduled…  over the course of two weeks…  finally updating from what was supposed to be a Friday delivery this week… to this coming Wednesday.  I gave up, cancelled that ordered and found something available in store local, the end result being a 750 watt corsair modular PSU which honestly was going to work better than the non-modular ketchup and mustard colored setup that I was trying to order on the cheap.

Serenity Lives

So yesterday I got everything up and running and set it up beside my existing computer so that I could install without having to give up access.  This is my first real foray into having an SSD, and from thumb drive…. windows 10 installed in about 2 minutes.  I was shocked at just how fast that whole process went… what I thought was going to be another screen asking for me to pick some options… ended up booting into windows.  For the time being I have Rift, World of Warcraft, Guild Wars 2, and Final Fantasy XIV running off of the SSD and everything else off of larger mechanical storage.  The biggest shock with this system is just how well Rift is performing.  That is one of those games that I thought no system would really run what I considered well.  I rarely see more than 40 fps and my last AMD based processor struggled to give it even that.  This new system was running it at 80+ fps with everything cranked up, even under the load of doing intrepid adventures.  So far I am pleased as can be, and while the games I play most of the time are not extremely graphically intensive… they are however apparently CPU locked… and my AMD FX-6300 was simply not performing that well.  This was really noticeable when my laptops with mobile i7 processors started out performing it.  Then again that machine was roughly three years old at this point, so I was prime for an upgrade.  Tonight I plan on getting Adobe Creative Cloud installed because I want to see what this does for rendering time…. which is something that the previous machine struggled at.  For those wondering the final specs look a little something like this.

  • Intel Core i7-5820K
  • ASUS X99-A/USB 3.1
  • 24 GB G.SKILL Ripjaw ram
  • MSI Gaming GeForce GTX 980 4GB OC
  • 250 GB Kingston SSD
  • 2 TB Western Digital HD
  • 3 TB Western Digital HD

The only real thing that I ultimately want to change at some point is the case, which is a budget Antec model.  It was perfectly adequate, but was a bit of a pain in the ass to work on.  Much of the frustrations yesterday were trying to get the cables to go where I wanted them to go for cable management purposes.  I had to disconnect and reconnect things several times to try and figure out the best way to route the cables through the fairly cramped space.  Additionally I have slight concerns that there were minimal case fans, but for the time being everything is running fairly cool.  Ultimately I am going to leave things be for the time being and see how well it runs in its current state before fiddling further.  Basically in its current state I don’t really feel comfortable trying to overclock anything given that there really isn’t the cooling for it.  That said performance wise… I have seen no real reason to overclock anything other than the base overclock that the video card is used to running under.  Of note… to explain the title of the post I decided to name this machine Serenity, because I am a dork.

AggroChat #127 – Gaming Summer Flings

Tonight Ashgar, Belghast, Grace, Tam and Thalen Discuss a ton of games we largely left on good terms.

aggrochat127_720

Tonight we talk about a bunch of stuff… starting off with our most recent trip into Guild Wars 2. Since the launch of this game a few of us have been searching trying to figure out exactly why people were so engaged with this game.  Finally after seeing Fractals and the updated version of dungeons we get it.  Additionally we talk about the Rise of Iron changes to Iron Banner, and a general sense of getting much better rewards in game.  Then we talk about the games we left on good terms including a bunch of blasts from the past.

Things Discussed

  • Guild Wars 2
  • Busy Books
  • Dungeons and Dragons Online
  • Fractals of the Mists
  • Exploration Mode
  • Dungeons
  • World Events
  • Destiny Rise of Iron
  • Iron Banner
  • Faction Packages
  • The Taken King
  • Leaving Games on Good Terms
  • Final Fantasy XIV
  • City of Heroes
  • The Secret World
  • Star Wars the Old Republic
  • Fallen Empire
  • Eternal Throne trailer

Finally Grasp It

Finally Grasp It

For several weeks now Tam has been wanting to get those of us together that have Guild Wars 2 and try some of the group content.  However the launch of World of Warcraft Legion put a pretty serious brake on that concept.  We agreed that last night was a decent night for myself, Tam, Thalen, Kodra and Ashgar so we set forth with the plan of getting together and running something as a group.  While we didn’t exactly get that entire team together we did venture forth into Fractals, which are dungeons of a sort, but the closest thing I can really relate them to is the Pandaria Heroic Scenarios.  You are dropped on a map and that map has certain objectives that it is leading you towards.  However as we found out last night there are several things that exist just off the beaten path, like a champion dragon of sorts that we managed to take down.  In total we ran three of them, and we spent a good deal of that time wiping as we adjusted our strategy to be able to take certain encounters down.  Throughout the night I flirted with several weapon combos… but wound up right back at Greatsword and Hammer as a warrior.  However after the fractals I spent some time playing sword and shield again and found it greatly improved over what I remember from alpha/beta.

Finally Grasp It

Ultimately what it really reminds me of the most are the encounters in Dungeons and Dragons Online.  Those were a fairly unique blend of exploration, reasoning, problem solving… and finally a heavy dose of surviving combat.  The problem there however is this was rendered in relatively low fidelity, and it felt cumbersome to have to comply with the various rules of the actual pen and paper game system.  Admittedly Guild Wars 2 is also fairly fiddly, with a bunch of sliders that you can tweak on your character to build for very specific purposes…  however it feels like it does a much better job at the sort of experience that DDO was trying to go for.  Fractals feel like bite sized adventures… more than just on rails dungeon crawls.  If we can actually get the proper group size on at some point, we need to give dungeons a proper attempt as well because it feels like there are actual tanky characters now.  We did some messing about with a training bot system inside the fractal hub, and quickly found out that apparently I have way more survival than either of my companions.  This is even more noticeable when we actually started to do harder content, because I could stay in and take those hits longer allowing them to hang out on the boundary and deal damage or reflect effects.  In group play it suddenly felt like we each had a clear role to play, and not quite the zergy mess that I remember from the launch of the game.

Finally Grasp It

This is really the first time in a very long time I can legitimately say I enjoyed playing Guild Wars 2.  It was extremely fun for group play, and that suddenly makes all of the more casual exploratory bits of the game more enjoyable because I know that it is all leading to something.  One of my key problems with Guild Wars 2 has been a feeling that I had capped out and was not really going to improve my gear in any reasonable fashion.  That changed the moment I set foot into the fractals hub and saw all of the “better than exotic” items that were available on the vendors there.  Additionally I used some of those laurels that I had been getting, and not really knowing what to do with them… to purchase a nice neck piece.  Ultimately I feel like I finally “get” why people enjoy this game, and while I doubt it will ever supplant a more traditional MMO for me…  it doesn’t really have to.  The set up of Guild Wars 2 makes it extremely to drop into game with my friends and have a night of play, much along the lines of how non-mmorpgs work.  After seeing that I could in fact be a tank in this game… it makes me feel significantly better about playing warrior, and makes me want to try out some of the other weapon combinations that I long abandoned.  I still have problems with the game in a few spots, but I  think I have largely reached a point of peace finally after all this time.  I can stop trying to solve this puzzle, because I finally grasp what folks see in it.

Finally Grasp It

Finally Grasp It

For several weeks now Tam has been wanting to get those of us together that have Guild Wars 2 and try some of the group content.  However the launch of World of Warcraft Legion put a pretty serious brake on that concept.  We agreed that last night was a decent night for myself, Tam, Thalen, Kodra and Ashgar so we set forth with the plan of getting together and running something as a group.  While we didn’t exactly get that entire team together we did venture forth into Fractals, which are dungeons of a sort, but the closest thing I can really relate them to is the Pandaria Heroic Scenarios.  You are dropped on a map and that map has certain objectives that it is leading you towards.  However as we found out last night there are several things that exist just off the beaten path, like a champion dragon of sorts that we managed to take down.  In total we ran three of them, and we spent a good deal of that time wiping as we adjusted our strategy to be able to take certain encounters down.  Throughout the night I flirted with several weapon combos… but wound up right back at Greatsword and Hammer as a warrior.  However after the fractals I spent some time playing sword and shield again and found it greatly improved over what I remember from alpha/beta.

Finally Grasp It

Ultimately what it really reminds me of the most are the encounters in Dungeons and Dragons Online.  Those were a fairly unique blend of exploration, reasoning, problem solving… and finally a heavy dose of surviving combat.  The problem there however is this was rendered in relatively low fidelity, and it felt cumbersome to have to comply with the various rules of the actual pen and paper game system.  Admittedly Guild Wars 2 is also fairly fiddly, with a bunch of sliders that you can tweak on your character to build for very specific purposes…  however it feels like it does a much better job at the sort of experience that DDO was trying to go for.  Fractals feel like bite sized adventures… more than just on rails dungeon crawls.  If we can actually get the proper group size on at some point, we need to give dungeons a proper attempt as well because it feels like there are actual tanky characters now.  We did some messing about with a training bot system inside the fractal hub, and quickly found out that apparently I have way more survival than either of my companions.  This is even more noticeable when we actually started to do harder content, because I could stay in and take those hits longer allowing them to hang out on the boundary and deal damage or reflect effects.  In group play it suddenly felt like we each had a clear role to play, and not quite the zergy mess that I remember from the launch of the game.

Finally Grasp It

This is really the first time in a very long time I can legitimately say I enjoyed playing Guild Wars 2.  It was extremely fun for group play, and that suddenly makes all of the more casual exploratory bits of the game more enjoyable because I know that it is all leading to something.  One of my key problems with Guild Wars 2 has been a feeling that I had capped out and was not really going to improve my gear in any reasonable fashion.  That changed the moment I set foot into the fractals hub and saw all of the “better than exotic” items that were available on the vendors there.  Additionally I used some of those laurels that I had been getting, and not really knowing what to do with them… to purchase a nice neck piece.  Ultimately I feel like I finally “get” why people enjoy this game, and while I doubt it will ever supplant a more traditional MMO for me…  it doesn’t really have to.  The set up of Guild Wars 2 makes it extremely to drop into game with my friends and have a night of play, much along the lines of how non-mmorpgs work.  After seeing that I could in fact be a tank in this game… it makes me feel significantly better about playing warrior, and makes me want to try out some of the other weapon combinations that I long abandoned.  I still have problems with the game in a few spots, but I  think I have largely reached a point of peace finally after all this time.  I can stop trying to solve this puzzle, because I finally grasp what folks see in it.