Stuck a Gtx 1060 in and would like to get start playing games on the pc again.
Where's best to buy from? Can you even buy physical games any more? Obviously I've been straight on steam and set up and account, bought the original quake for 99p for old times sake, downloaded Just Cause 3 ( only played about 10mins so far ) but took forever to download
Racing games?
What's worth paying for? I'm not going for a full sim setup so think an iracing sub would be pointless, assetto corsa still good?
Assetto corsa is very good for something to jump in and have a blast on, iracing is the best as far as physics and feeling like driving a real car goes, but AC gets very close. There’s a new AC coming out next month kind you, the official game of the blancpain gt series and it looks great.
Yeah they're fine. Bought a few things over the years from there - a few of the others (Kinguin? And CJS?) I think are the ones who can be hit and miss.
RobYob wrote: Sun Aug 12, 2018 8:19 amHumble bundles can be ridiculously good value if you catch them at the right time.
Dishonoured was a great game, on sale £2 is a bargain.
How do the humble bundles work? Do you get all the games in each bracket? I.e. The sports one, I quite fancied grid 2, but pay the next bracket and you unlock dirt rally which I also fancied, which is £4.99 elsewhere on its own, next bracket at £9 unlocks f1 2017, so I could get all three for £9?
Can see it working out nicely if you happen to want a number of games in a bundle.
Yeah, so $1 or more gets 3 games,
$6.24 gets the next 3 (and including the previous 3)
$12 gets you F1 2017 and the previous 6.
Also, if you're into racing games, I'd definitely take a look at getting yourself a VR headset if you can budget it - for race/flight sims they're just awesome.
RobYob wrote: Sun Aug 12, 2018 10:11 am
Steam controller is also excellent for various games although I haven't used it for DS. The touchpads are very handy as mouse substitutes.
Might give one a go, I'm on my third 360 controller as the kids pull them off my desk and they don't deal well with the drop.
If you like a bit of Quake, you owe it to yourself to look at what Doom has become - and I don't mean the 2016 version, either (although I hear it's excellent fun).
The Doom engine was open sourced and community members rebuilt it from the ground up into programs called GZDoom and Zandronum, which are the most polished and stable.
It can now, with some mods, do things like this:
Guncaster:
Loosely attached to Heretic lore, a power mod with good scaling (you can make your weapons/the enemies more/less powerful) and a good secondary weapon system. You are a pissed off dragon, you have big guns, you kill everything.
Brutal Doom:
A fairly straight weapon set and enemy update, but well known for taking existing gore packs, massively expanding on it, replacing weapons and enemy behaviours - it injects a fair amount of adrenaline into the base game.
Russian Overkill:
You can probably guess the theme of this.
Russian overkill features a chaingun that fires chainguns that fire their own bullets (yes, really), and a weapon that fires miniature fighter jets which do bombing runs on their path to the target.
Oh, and it has half a dozen nuke weapons, going from mini nukes that will wipe out a room, to larger ones that will wipe out the entire level.
Given how cheepy cheep Doom is (to get the WAD/official levels - required for some mods) and the number of free level packs (FreeDoom, Brutal Doom Starter Pack, Slaughterfest 2012, etc) and how much development still goes on, if you like old school shooters, it's still absolutely worth a look and using something like GZDoom and a good mod/map pack, it's still extremely playable.
Doom 2 was the first ever pc game I bought, back in the mid 90s on 4 floppys, for our 486dx2 66 with 4mb of ram.
Weirdly it wouldn't run in anything but a minute window unless you'd run a certain other game in windows (3.11) first, then dropped to dos to run doom which it would then run nicely at full screen