![]() ![]() And didn't Bethesda say 5820k(a hex core) for recommended CPU for the HD texture DLC? It works fine for me on a i7-7700. I know about the minimum requirements but my experience is being at the minimum/close to minimum for earlier Bethesda games can still mean not being able to run it or getting tons of crashes like I did at min specs for Oblivion/FO3/NV or like I'd seen people on Beth net complain about bad performance/crashes when they have 750Ti, 760 or 770 so min spec GPUs. I knew about FO4 VR but figured we'd need 1080ti/Titan Xp/next gen Volta to realistically run it well so this topic is certainly a surprise. ![]() VR has just appeared on my radar pretty much today, before I'd seen stuff like Job Simulator a few years ago and didn't really care for it just figured it'd be a fad. Most likely I will buy something on Boxing Day if I am able to, probably Oculus if I go for VR. But with Oculus being as aggressive as they are on the price it's very hard to recommend buying a different VR headset.Ĭlick to expand.What is your view on jumping in on VR right now vs waiting? I am actually thinking about it now though prices are a bit high for me since I am also wanting some other components like RAM/2nd SSD. If the HTC Vive or Samsung Odyssey price ever got down to around $400 then it would be a much tougher decision. And on the software side the optimizations on the Oculus Rift platform make playing graphically demanding games slightly smoother than on both the HTC Vive and the Samsung Odyssey. And purchase a 3rd sensor for accurate tracking about equal to an HTC Vive for another $75 for a total of $375. You can get it for $299 ($399 - $100 store rebate/giftcard) when certain sales pop up. If I were buying a VR headset now I'd probably go with an Oculus Rift just because of the price and gameplay performance. Although it means tracking accuracy is not as good as the other two VR headsets. The position tracking is all built in the headset, no external trackers/cameras. The Samsung Odyssey has the highest screen resolution of the three, great comfort, and easy setup or re-setup. The HTC Vive has a slightly larger field of view, slightly better tracking, and is more likely to get hardware accessories developed for it before the other VR headsets. It has slightly better controllers than the other two and it's likely to get software or OS technology advances quicker than other VR headsets because of how large Oculus' research investment is. The Oculus Rift is great at comfort, ergonomics, lens clarity, and low cost. So it's probably safe to get a VR headset now, either an Oculus Rift, an HTC Vive, or a Samsung Odyssey. It probably has the best of Samsung's own oled screens right now. Although if Asus comes out with a VR headset this year I don't think it will be better than the Samsung Odyssey for Windows MR, which runs on Windows MR platform but can run SteamVR games or even Oculus games with a hack. There might be an Asus VR headset this year that takes HTC Vive's spot with better specs. Oculus Rift will probably have a new version in 2019. But I haven't really experienced any yet besides rain occlusion not working. Although it is Fallout 4, so bugs as usual. Performance is pretty good from 980 ti and up. Thanks, I found the auto upgrade option today. ![]()
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