Hobo Simulator.
agpickle
Theres one on the iPhone called iHobo
Forum Posts | Following | Followers |
---|---|---|
82 | 36 | 29 |
After seeing Street Cleaner Simulator and now Ski Region Simulator in Start/Select@Gamescom, If you could make any niche simulator of your choice what would it be?
The crazier the suggestions the better :P
[QUOTE="VeNoM_JaCKaL"]Must be quite a while since you tried one lol These issues seems like a blast from the past, haven't seen any mouse with these kind of problems in the last 5 years. To OP: Since you're not a professional or looking to become one tomorrow, wireless is just fine. You won't notice any difference but just get a known brand. Also, I would suggest to buy it from a store where you can try before you buy, the most important is that you think it is comfortable.The first gaming mouse I used to have was the Logitech G7 carbon fibre edition (wirless gaming mouse) years back. Had quite a few issues with it back then - after multiple recharges the battery wouldn't hold the charge for as long as when purchased. Which is expected but it was almost halved with 18 months of use. Single would be disrupted from time to time so mouse became unresponsive for a while (2-5 secs).
Most noticeably which I hadn't expected was the weight of the mouse. Going from cabled to wireless you don't realise how heavy wireless mouse are with the battery and charging mechanism inside. It took me a while to adjust but eventually I because used to it. Upping the sensitivity and speed helped as well to accommodate for the weight.
Now I have Razer Deathadder and Mamba and I still prefer the wired mouse to be frank. You can purchase cable holders and the cables really don't get in the way. Cabled mouse are considered superior in almost every aspect especially when it comes to performance and more specifically when you are looking at gaming. It's generally why most/all professional gamers use cabled mouse.
masterdrat
Not really I have a Razer Mamba that I have demoted to being at my work rather than at home. The battery has degraded after use and still drops signal sometimes but only for split second. It's heavier too xD still prefer cabled but each to there own.
I would have to say any of the three. Dragons Age 2 is the more demanding though I found. You will have to put some hours into it especially on higher difficulty level.
Virtually no difference between them.
I go external because i need the space inside my case for GPUs. All that matters is the quality of the hardware. Make sure what you get supports, 802.11n
Blue-Sky
I would have to agree "expansion slots are like gold dust" ;D currently use ****** Double N+ Dual Band USB Wireless Adapter on my HTPC no complaints atm.
[QUOTE="Lox_Cropek"]Are you have any problems with any games right now? If things are wroking fine, there really isn't any reasy for you to upgrade. If you do and find problems, just install the previous drivers you were using.Should I update? Any problems with it?
neatfeatguy
I would have to agree unless there is a fix for a specific problem that you are experiencing, significant performance boost or new feature there is no reason to update from working drivers.
Yes you can as you stated all you would need to do in BIOS is to select the boot device to go into either OS. Just curious why not just make another partition on the same drive and install there. It will save you having to go into BIOS each time? is it because you don't have the space.
On btw on most BIOS's you can just press F9 (usually) on boot to bring the boot menu rather than just going into BIOS interface and back out. It should be quicker. :)
The first gaming mouse I used to have was the Logitech G7 carbon fibre edition (wirless gaming mouse) years back. Had quite a few issues with it back then - after multiple recharges the battery wouldn't hold the charge for as long as when purchased. Which is expected but it was almost halved with 18 months of use. Single would be disrupted from time to time so mouse became unresponsive for a while (2-5 secs).
Most noticeably which I hadn't expected was the weight of the mouse. Going from cabled to wireless you don't realise how heavy wireless mouse are with the battery and charging mechanism inside. It took me a while to adjust but eventually I because used to it. Upping the sensitivity and speed helped as well to accommodate for the weight.
Now I have Razer Deathadder and Mamba and I still prefer the wired mouse to be frank. You can purchase cable holders and the cables really don't get in the way. Cabled mouse are considered superior in almost every aspect especially when it comes to performance and more specifically when you are looking at gaming. It's generally why most/all professional gamers use cabled mouse.
Log in to comment