Jan 25, 2010
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Oct 30, 2009
Oct 21, 2009
Legally Binding
I am just not a keybinding type of WoW player. No matter how hard I try to get into it, I find myself time and time again resorting to clicking because it's simply more comfortable for me. Instead of binding my keys, I simply place the ones I use the most on the screen in specific places so I know exactly where they are at all times. Do I lose a little bit in the process? Maybe, but I think that I'd lose more if I attempted to hotkey every single ability I have (like some people do). I think perhaps I'm just a more visual person, so thinking to myself that the blue square = Icy Touch rather than 3 = Icy Touch just makes more sense for me.
I've also discovered the power of macros lately, which has helped the problem out greatly. Now, I simply macro my rotation to a single button, place it in such a manner that I know where to find it and the abilities that I have to toss in conditionally along side it, and I'm good to go. Again, this just feels more comfortable to me, and makes sense given my play style.
You can go ahead and have your hotkeys. I don't want them.
I've also discovered the power of macros lately, which has helped the problem out greatly. Now, I simply macro my rotation to a single button, place it in such a manner that I know where to find it and the abilities that I have to toss in conditionally along side it, and I'm good to go. Again, this just feels more comfortable to me, and makes sense given my play style.
You can go ahead and have your hotkeys. I don't want them.
Sep 13, 2009
WoW FPS
Over the past week or so, I've been doing a modified computer build for my wife--in effect, buying a low-cost off-the-shelf PC with a decent processor and a hardy amount of RAM then upgrading the individual components as necessary to bring things up to spec. Overwhelmingly this has gone fabulously, with one notable snag:
World of Warcraft.
There is just something about this game, deep in it's coding, that makes it do the strangest things. After its 2004 debut, it's been patched and expanded so many times that the game as it exists right now is sort of the gaming equivalent of The Burrow--one layer merely stacked on top of each other as necessary. There is no one component of a computer that a person can upgrade to give them perfect FPS at all times. Period. As it's an older game, it's seen more graphics cards come and go than most ever will, and there's simply no optimizing it for every single one. Add onto that CPU loads and network latency, and from one area to the next your FPS are going to bounce around like nobody's business.
Quite frankly, anybody telling you that they have 150 FPS at all times in WoW is either an outright liar, or running some sort of basement supercomputer. On two capable laptops and the newly built desktop, I regularly watch my FPS bounce around anywhere from 20-30 in Dalaran, to 30-35 in Zangarmarsh, and 150+ in instances and indoor locations. There simply is no one hardware configuration or software setting that is going to lock down your FPS at all times. More importantly, I've come to realize, is stabilizing it above 30 FPS. The game is optimized to run at 30 FPS, so if you can keep your system at or above that whenever something important is going on, you're golden.
Ultimately it is more than a bit disappointing to have an extremely capable setup run seemingly so poorly on such a seemingly old game, but when you realize how expansive and massive the world is, and how much can really be going on at once, 30 FPS really isn't that bad. It's definitely something a person can safely live, even if they're not going to be writing home about it any time soon.
Plus, if you're anything like me you can just boot up COD4 and enjoy the pure pleasure of 150 FPS.
World of Warcraft.
There is just something about this game, deep in it's coding, that makes it do the strangest things. After its 2004 debut, it's been patched and expanded so many times that the game as it exists right now is sort of the gaming equivalent of The Burrow--one layer merely stacked on top of each other as necessary. There is no one component of a computer that a person can upgrade to give them perfect FPS at all times. Period. As it's an older game, it's seen more graphics cards come and go than most ever will, and there's simply no optimizing it for every single one. Add onto that CPU loads and network latency, and from one area to the next your FPS are going to bounce around like nobody's business.
Quite frankly, anybody telling you that they have 150 FPS at all times in WoW is either an outright liar, or running some sort of basement supercomputer. On two capable laptops and the newly built desktop, I regularly watch my FPS bounce around anywhere from 20-30 in Dalaran, to 30-35 in Zangarmarsh, and 150+ in instances and indoor locations. There simply is no one hardware configuration or software setting that is going to lock down your FPS at all times. More importantly, I've come to realize, is stabilizing it above 30 FPS. The game is optimized to run at 30 FPS, so if you can keep your system at or above that whenever something important is going on, you're golden.
Ultimately it is more than a bit disappointing to have an extremely capable setup run seemingly so poorly on such a seemingly old game, but when you realize how expansive and massive the world is, and how much can really be going on at once, 30 FPS really isn't that bad. It's definitely something a person can safely live, even if they're not going to be writing home about it any time soon.
Plus, if you're anything like me you can just boot up COD4 and enjoy the pure pleasure of 150 FPS.
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