📰 Game News
Berita game terbaru, giveaway, kode redeem & event • 12 artikel
DeviceReport claims the global CPU shortage is 'more acute for processors than memory' as industry waits for Intel's 18A chips to plug the gap
Yes, it's caused by AI demand. What else?
DevicePhilips and AOC's upcoming 5th-gen OLED gaming monitors were a feast for my eyes and a dire threat to my wallet
My bank won't return my calls.
Device'Are monitors anti-inflation?': AOC argues monitors are a better upgrade than graphics cards or memory right now, which seems like the kind of thing a monitor manufacturer would say
Even if it's kinda true, it still feels strange to say it.
DevicePhilips is bringing its 5K dual-mode gaming monitor to the West, and it comes in a neat white shell
Unlike its Chinese counterpart, it has some fancy lights and USB Type-C.
Device'I've read your reviews': AOC says its software is 'one of the most highlighted' problems and it's 'finally, finally' updating its OSD
Suppose it's about time, with the popularity of dual-mode.
DeviceI found out the hard way that Linux is not a dad-friendly gaming OS, and maybe neither is the PC
PC gaming still has accessbility issues, and Linux gaming doubly so.
ConsoleWith the right settings, Pragmata can hack it on the Steam Deck - more or less
Sci-fi dadblaster Pragmata is Capcom’s second smooth-running RE Engine game in two months, dishing out loads of ray-traced frames on muscular PCs while still running at a decent clip if you don’t quite meet all of its minimum system specs. But what happens when you dip even lower, down towards the realm of shared RAM and integrated graphics in which the Steam Deck resides? That’s mostly fine too. Probably didn’t need the dramatic buildup, did it. Read more
Even with ray tracing to buff out its bots, Pragmata performs a treat on PC
Capcom’s hardware redemption continues with fatherly hack o’ shooter Pragmata, a smooth and low-end-friendly PC performer that’s far more Resident Evil Requiem than Monster Hunter Wilds. It’s maybe not quite on Requiem’s level of framerate abundance, and Pragmata struggles a teeny bit more on underpowered handheld PCs – which we both know means the Steam Deck – during its tougher stretches of polished moonbase corridors and electricity-spewing robofoes.
DeviceWith DLSS 5, Nvidia look to rewrite the truth before our eyes
Earlier this year Nvidia announced DLSS 5, a new version of their DLSS technology: a layer of graphical magic that uses their GPUs to do improbable things to the resolution and framerate of your favourite PC games (unless your favourite PC game is Slay the Spire). Nvidia are in a strange space at the moment - now one of the most valuable companies to ever have existed, they're also one of the drivers of the AI boom and all of the horror and chaos that comes with it. PC gamers, once their core ma
DeviceEpomaker HE68 Lite gaming keyboard review: a properly cheap mechanical board with premium tricks
Maybe it was the past few months of RAMnarök hacking away at my optimism, but my first thoughts upon handling the fifty-buck Epomaker HE68 Lite fixated on how it might not just be cheap in the good way. Surrounded by a bezel of hollow, slightly scratchy plastic, it certainly lacks the reassuringly brick-like heft that most mech boards have over their membraned cousins, to an extent that’s only partially accounted for by its compact 65% form factor. Read more
ConsoleFrom the C: to the /Mnt/s, Linux is better than ever for PC gaming – and easier to switch to from Windows
A few months ago, I did something radical. For radical, picture me skateboarding ungainly while installing Linux - or, to be more precise CachyOS - on my PC. Windows 11 had just been bugging me too much. On top of Microsoft's forced AI implementation growing ever more obscene, I was starting to get unexplained slowdown; something that would usually just prompt a Windows reinstall, as I've done countless times all the way back to Windows Vista. However, prompted by my good friend (and writer at c
Device"Framerate Estimator" evidence in Steam's new update points to more detailed performance tests than Valve's Verified programmes
Steam is, most likely, going to get a lot more prophetic about how its thousands of games might run on your PC. ResetEra user dex3108 spotted, deep within the Valve app’s newest client update, a number of unused text strings relating to a "Framerate Estimator" tool. Putting aside my sadness that no-one’s ever thought to call me The Framerate Estimator, in the appropriate title case, it sounds like this would take a rough punt on how many frames per second the user’s hardware ca
