No you argued that there was a lot of tweaking required per game. There isn't. The only tweak that is recommended for The Evil Within is to disable its shitty framerate limiter. There are no recommendations for Bayonetta.bobrocks95 wrote:I saw a person with worse hardware than you saying they were running Dragon's Dogma at a near-locked 144 fps. As I argued with ZellSF, such is PC gaming.
evil_ash_xero: what you should do is settle on a global sync setting: go to NVIDIA Control Panel, Manage 3D Settings and try every Vertical sync option to see which you prefer. If you think framerate drops are too brutal you probably have vsync on and should set it to adaptive.
If you don't mind going more complicated and want the best experience, you should try to see if you like triple buffering, either forced through D3DOverrider (I think it's 32-bit and DX9 only) or running games in borderless window mode which forces Window's own v-sync + triple buffer implementation by default. You should also experiment with how framerate limiters affect your experience.
I never said PC gaming was easy, but this is a thing you set once and forget it. I just said you should never have to tweak a lot of stuff per game. Well I actually think PC gaming is easy, if you get yourself a FreeSync or G-Sync monitor so you don't have to deal with the mess I described above.
Did you specify your monitor resolution? Sort of hard to tell if your performance is normal without that information.
Every PC hardware issue I've had have been so intermittent and random that sending it back to the manufacturer would guaranteed end up with "can't reproduce, wiped software, try again".I always build myself but it can be hell if something goes wrong... say your PC randomly freezes, how do you know which component to return, RAM, GPU, CPU, Motherboard? Send the wrong bit back and they charge you for testing it and returning it again. I've been in that situation a couple times and it's not fun.
Prebuilt PCs are if you want to save some effort putting it together, but I would not get one for support and I would not expect one to use the best parts. Though if you want to spend a couple hundred dollars for not having to put things together yourself, I think that's perfectly normal. It's hardly worse than a lot of the shit I (or anyone here) spends money on.