Thursday, December 22, 2011

What Does A Computer Gaming System Need?

By Owen Jones


In order for any piece of apparatus to work it needs to have definite requirements met. For instance, most pieces of apparatus need electricity, but there are other, more delicate devices that have more specific requirements. Computer programs are a decent instance of these. All computer programs need a minimum amount of memory and a definite minimum speed processor to run in.

Computer games are merely computer programs, albeit very specialized ones and they have very precise requirements as well. Computer games by and large require speed, which just means plenty of processing power to read the game/program itself and read the instructions from peripherals such as the gaming console.

Therefore, in order to play the faster games, you really need a high spec machine - a much faster machine than you require to run an office and you can surf the Net on a computer that is ten years old.

Another factor in the gaming industry is that the games designers all use the latest and greatest equipment on the market in order produce and test their ideas. Therefore, the end user will have to use comparable equipment in order to get the most from their games.

The minimum requirements for playing a game are usually written on the box. Pay attention to the minimum speed of processor; minimum graphics card; minimum RAM; minimum monitor resolution.

The CPU or processor's speed is usually the stumbling block for gamers. A computer is soon out of date. You can usually upgrade the processor for two or three years, but after that you might need a new motherboard or even a new computer. Units of speed are measured in MHz and GHz (1,000 MHz is equal to 1 GHz). An office computer will gladly run most office programs at 2 GHz - 2.5GHz, but you will need 3+ GHz to run most games.

RAM is also terribly critical for games because this is the region within a computer that holds the information that has to get processed most frequently or simply next. Everything else gets written to disk even if it is only for a few seconds. Therefore, the larger the RAM, the less saving to and reading from disk, which takes comparatively a lot more time. Office machines are happy with 2 GB, games machines may need 3-4 GB. Four or five years ago, most people were glad with 500 MB or even 1,000 MB (or 1 GB).

Video RAM (VRAM) used to get borrowed from RAM, which was a bit of a con, actually. These days, high-spec machines have their own VRAM. Get as much as you can, but minimum 500-1,000 MB. VRAM is used by the video card to manage the graphics.

Hard Disk capacity used to be a worry but hardly ever is these days. Games are usually loaded from a CD drive or a flash card, but you need a minimum amount of free HD space to write back and forth to (see RAM above). One note here though, if you are buying a new HD or CD drive, go for the fastest you can afford, but most of them are decent enough nowadays. The same with monitors.




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