I rarely game on my iMac. I prefer to use my PS4 instead. It gives me the better experience and I prefer to game on my big 4K Sony TV. It doesn't matter if PC games on expensive PCs using high end graphic cards look better, the overall user experience on a console is better.
I rarely game on my iMac. I prefer to use my PS4 instead. It gives me the better experience and I prefer to game on my big 4K Sony TV. It doesn't matter if PC games on expensive PCs using high end graphic cards look better, the overall user experience on a console is better.
I rarely game on my iMac. I prefer to use my PS4 instead. It gives me the better experience and I prefer to game on my big 4K Sony TV. It doesn't matter if PC games on expensive PCs using high end graphic cards look better, the overall user experience on a console is better.
You're missing the point.
If you bought a proper gaming rig, performance would be vastly improved. Vastly. Serious gamers will not be using laptop hardware. Come on, now.
I have a console for gaming and computer for work, sure my iMac can run most games, but honestly it's not something I choose to do.
Most if not all games available for PC are on PS4/Xbox One so why not just game on a dedicated console which imo is a much better experience anyways. Computers need high res monitors because you sit close to them, sitting on a couch 10 feet away from your TV no one can really tell the difference between 1080p and 2.5k.
I own a Nintendo Wii U and Xbox One which has games (especially Nintendo) that will never see the light of day on PC, same goes for PS4 with their exclusives as well. So the ONLY advantage of a PC is higher res, faster fps and possibly cheaper games, but you lose out on many games. Heck GTAV hasn't even been released yet for PC platform..... Sure the mods are the best, but I would say PC gaming is very very niche and honestly I do not have the patience or time to use the platform.
I have a Mac Pro (6-core, D700's) and I've boot-camped it. I also have a PC (core i7, GTX 780). I prefer Mac as my every day computing platform.
For gaming however the PC is a much better platform. A single GTX 780 is close to the performance of the two D700's when they are running in Crossfire and if those games support Crossfire. The PC get's similar performance with a much simpler configuration. The PC cost around £1,500 the Mac cost £4000. I could add another GTX 780 into my PC, and configure them in SLI, for around £300 and it would be much quicker than the Mac, or I could add any of the high-end GPU's as the GTX 780 is a couple of years old now - the PC has a 1300W PSU and plenty of PCI-e slots. I have lots of choices and the CPU is not a bottleneck in anyway.
Then there's the small issue of most games are made for consoles and Windows, with tiny handful making it to the Mac.
Sadly if you are a gamer rather than someone who plays the odd game, the Mac is not the right platform. I have the fastest currently available GPU's from Apple (D700) and the solution is easily beaten by a cheap PC. The iMac with it's mobile GPU wouldn't stand a chance. Sorry, as much as I like the Mac it's not a powerful gaming platform, but it is a very good every day computing platform.
I have the same Mac Pro, except went with the D500 and invested the savings in upgrading it to 64GB of RAM.
It's my daily "go to" machine for everything I do at home, including occasionally working from home doing computer support and network administration for my employer.
I used to care more about gaming but find as I get older, it's just less and less of a "thing". I think this is partially because at my age, I feel like I've "been there, done that" so often when I play a new game title. I'm part of the generation that grew up with the "classics" like Pac-Man, Donkey Kong, Asteroids, Qix, Zaxxon, Defender and Frogger. It's great seeing how far gaming has come from those days, on one hand. But on the other, I see so much repetition now. 99% of the 3D shooters are the same, tired game-play and mechanics, wrapped around a slightly different story-line. Almost all the car racing games fall into 1 of 2 categories; your "big name race" simulators where you see if you can get the best time around a course, and your "street racing" games where you've got the stereotypical "sexy women" and "cool dudes" betting money on winners so you can spend it in-game on car upgrades and accessories. And fantasy RPGs have never changed... I imagine by the time I retire, they'll be on Diablo IX or X, Final Fantasy 100, etc.
I'm to the point where I'd rather have the overall superior machine that a Mac Pro workstation is (near silent operation, stylish and doesn't take up much space on my desk, unbeatable for "pro apps" like Final Cut Pro X or Logic Pro X, etc.) -- and just play the games that DO come out for Mac, if they look interesting. Few though they might be, they're usually the "proven popular" ones that come over from the Windows and/or console side of things - so they're rarely a "dud".
How did you get your G29 to work? I downloaded IRacing on my Mac and it says it doesn't recognize my controller?Gaming all the time on my iMac5k, mostly racing sims with a Logitech G29 wheel...iRacing, Project Cars, Dirt Rally. Awesome stuff!