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Laporkan kesalahan penerjemahan
2. VRAM doesn't work how you think it does.
3. CPU "usage" is misleading and not a super useful metric.
4. Laptop hardware is leagues weaker than desktop hardware.
tl;dr: you have a toaster
Recommended Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960 or comparable
Also, a game doesn't need to use up all your available VRAM before it starts slowing down. The amount of data in your VRAM, to oversimplify things, behaves as a cache for readily available textures and other bits of info. Jamming more data in there won't necessarily improve performance, in fact having more data to sift through could do the opposite. The game will begin to slow down once it's pushed the shader units (and other on-board modules) faster and heavier than, say, a 940MX can sustain.
I don't always like to rely on manufacturer reccommended specs, since sometimes they're either overpowered or underpowered (hardcore enthusiasts who spent thousands to play Crysis at sub-console settings will confirm this). Megadimension, however, will likely benefit significantly from a more powerful GPU (the reccommended GTX 960 desktop variant is at least four-six times more potent than your 940MX). Since you're using a laptop and unlikely to upgrade anytime soon, the answer is to just bite it and take the performance as it is. In these situations, usually a reliable 30+ fps rate is considered superb (read: good enough).
TL;DR: Your GPU is low-mid tier (overall PC is good, though), Megadimension (perhaps unfairly) mandates higher system specs, forcing the use of additional VRAM wouldn't necessarily imporove performance, & 30+ fps is the best you (and most others) could hope for.
Literally the nicest post you'll likely ever get on this topic.
It's an "i7" yes, but it's a dual-core super-low TDP laptop "i7".
I don't know why you're brining up his CPU quality, but it shouldn't be bottle-necking his system. Even in a worst-case scenario, he's using a CPU that would out-perform the minimum required
i5 @ 2.3GHz (and at that clockspeed, it's either a laptop or really old gen desktop i5 CPU).
I'm also looking at various benchmarks; while I'm always wary of synthetic benchmarks, the plain fact is that the i7-7500U is a mid-tier CPU at worst.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Kaby-Lake-Core-i7-7500U-Review-Skylake-on-Steroids.172692.0.html
http://cpu.userbenchmark.com/Compare/Intel-Core-i7-7500U-vs-Intel-Core-i7-6700HQ/m171274vsm34954
https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Core+i7-7500U+%40+2.70GHz
It's a low tier CPU, and it will impact performance. It's not the whole cause of performance, but the fact is OPs comp is low-tier across the board.
Recommended Processor: Intel i5 3.3 GHz or comparable
His CPU is under the Recomended Specs, but above the minimum, same deal as his graphics card.
ur waifu a ♥♥♥♥
Ultra-books aren't designed for gaming and seeing as that setup is the bona-fide Ultrabook setup, you're spitting at nothing but yourself.
Its a gimped, out of date GPU with just under 400 shader units, resemblent of a desktop GPU from 2009, the CPU is a dual core when most demanding gaming applications this day and age require a quad core... not to mention you're playing a game ported directly from the PS4.
Ultimately its trying to get blood out of a stone.
Still, i was able to play this game on 60 FPS, with no frame drops whatsoever. My CPU and RAM are both at very good standards, just saying.
I think the specs description is a bit overkill. You read that GTX 960 requirement on every game they published since V2:
- MegaTagmension Blanc
- Trillion
- FFF: Advent Dark Force
- Monster Monpiece
It's fail information. You still need good specs (atleast for the PS4 ports, they're a bit more demanding), but many PCs nowadays should be able to handle this.
Btw, in preparation to 4GO, don't get your hopes up. Because this one is on a whole new level in terms of specs. You better think now about an upgrade or you buy a PS4.
Def going to put you leagues ahead of OP's ultrabook dual-core.
Specs are typically based off what a company tested, or a rough outline of what they support. Requirements frequently will have a decent amount of "wiggle room" (assuming you aren't one of those "MAX RES ULTRA GRAPHICSSSSS AAA GAEMS" nutjobs), since companies don't have the time or resources to test every possible GPU & CPU and companies need to draw a 'line in the sand' as far as what they will or won't provide support for.
By listing say a desktop GTX 960 as the minimum, the support staff answering emails or tickets can save a lot of effort on integrated GPU and mobile GPU complaints/issues.
The ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ you've spouted in this thread is what gives people false hopes, lets them get suckered into ♥♥♥♥ like "optimization apps", and gives them the wrong idea about whats going on. Ignoring reality isn't going to make OP's computer a better gaming machine. Buying into "omg it's a i7!!!!1" marketing isn't going to change the fact it's an ultra-low power dual-core with battery efficiency being top priority.
Does it make OP a "bad person" that his computer is ♥♥♥♥? Not at all, it's simply a fact. So, take your snowflake ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ elsewhere.