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Stonehearth game stability
Stonehearth game stability













  1. #STONEHEARTH GAME STABILITY UPGRADE#
  2. #STONEHEARTH GAME STABILITY PRO#
  3. #STONEHEARTH GAME STABILITY TRIAL#
  4. #STONEHEARTH GAME STABILITY PC#

Headphones: The earbuds that came with my phone, I'm sorry. Graphics card: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2070 Superĭisplays: 2x ASUS VN279QL 27" and 1 Asus TUF Gaming VG27AQ 27" Though I'm also eyeing up a larger 1000+ Watt PSU so that I can slip this 850W one into a test machine.

stonehearth game stability

I could do with a faster RAM kit, as my four sticks are from two different sets that have to run slightly slower than advertised for stability. Though I sometimes dip my toes back into Destiny 2, and I regularly plug in a racing wheel for some F1 2021 action.

stonehearth game stability

That game takes up most of my time as I've usually a friend online keen to play a round or two. I'm a Hunt: Showdown man and have been for over a year now. I also have a Loupedeck on hand at all times and really rate my trusty Rode PSA-1 boom arm.

#STONEHEARTH GAME STABILITY PRO#

Similarly, the Logitech G Pro is my go-to mouse, so much so that I'm starting to wear down its matt finish to a shiny plastic.įor audio, I always have my Sennheiser HD 650 headphones at the ready with my Schiit DAC and amp combo, though a set of Logitech G560 speakers are useful in a pinch. I still have a soft spot for the Topre Realforce, however. I'm so used to typing on my clicky Logitech G915 wireless keyboard that I find it weird to type on anything taller nowadays.

#STONEHEARTH GAME STABILITY PC#

That said, there are some PC peripherals I always return to. It's a perk of the job playing with all the latest gear, though I am running out of storage space for cardboard boxes at an alarming rate.

#STONEHEARTH GAME STABILITY TRIAL#

I receive a steady churn of new headsets, keyboards, coolers, and other components that require testing, and there's no better trial by fire for review than using them yourself for a week or two. Mouse: Logitech G Pro Wireless Superlightīeing a hardware journo I tend to find my PC build is on a constant rotation of parts. Keyboard: Logitech G915 Wireless (clicky) SSD: WD Black SN750 1TB, Samsung 870 QVO 1TB, Addlink SATA 1TB, Crucial P2 500GB, Samsung PV128 128GB RAM: 32GB (4x 8GB) Corsair Vengeance DDR4 2,666MHz Unless something breaks, I'll not be touching it again for years. But I was able to find one during the worst of the GPU drought, and I wasn't about to let reason or common sense get in my way. "Neither of those games need an RTX 3080 Ti," you say? This may be true, but I would suggest that my decision to buy one was neither rational nor good. They all flash in sync, which makes me happier than it should.Ĭurrently I'm mostly bouncing between Destiny 2 and Guild Wars 2, with vague plans to finally start Elden Ring sometime soon. I also recently augmented my Razer Chroma keyboard and mouse with the accompanying RGB mousepad. My second monitor is older still: a 16:10 ratio Dell that does the job as a second screen. Back in 2016 I invested in a 165Hz 1440p monitor, and I've no intention of moving up to 4K anytime soon.

#STONEHEARTH GAME STABILITY UPGRADE#

I still maintain that this was an upgrade rather than a new build, and not even Plato will convince me otherwise. By the end of my spending spree all that remained were the graphics card and the PSU. I also needed a new, compatible motherboard.Īnd if I'm doing that, I may as well replace my increasingly shabby Fractal Design Define R3 case-its top USB ports long since broken-with something a bit more modern.

stonehearth game stability

The thing is: you don't just upgrade a CPU. My i5-6600K was feeling a bit long in the tooth, and, with a new generation of consoles on the way, it seemed like a good time to prepare for the inevitable jump in system requirements. SSD: 1TB Samsung 970 EVO NVMe M.2, 2TB Samsung 860 EVOĭisplays: Asus PG279Q 27-inch, Dell U2410 24-inchĪbout halfway through 2020, I decided I needed a new CPU. Graphics card: ASYS RTX 3080 Ti ROG Strix Besides, it runs everything I've thrown at it pretty much flawlessly, and the upgrade from a 1080 screen to a 1440 was enough of a jump that I don't think my eyes could handle 4K even if they wanted it. I lucked out on the timing, and while buying a 20-series card just before the 30-series came out was a bit of a pain, it also pre-empted the great GPU drought so I cannae be too upset. Nothing stresses me out more than shopping for PC parts and putting them together, so when tasked with replacing my ageing student PC the other year, I gave my smartest friends a budget and told them to figure it out. SSD: WD Blue SN550 1TB High-Performance M.2 PCIe NVMe RAM: 2x8GB Crucial Ballistix RGB 3600 DDR4 Motherboard: ASRock X570 Phantom Gaming 4 ATX















Stonehearth game stability