There is never too much of a good horror movie. The independent studio Frictional Games has proved that it can create an atmospheric representative of this genre. After the extremely successful game SOMA, the creators return to their origins, namely to the Amnesia series, the second part of which, Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs, was made by another developer – The Chinese Room (authors Dear Esther and Everybody’s Gone to the Rapture). After seven years of waiting, the third installment, which is not intended to be a direct sequel to the story, will be released next week. Therefore, the manufacturer was ready to share the hardware requirements of the PC version on the Steam platform. By the way, a new, extensive gameplay has been released with a comment from developers, which suggests that the game will try to freeze our blood in our veins.
We got to know the hardware requirements of Amnesia: Rebirth, the third installment of the horror series. Pending fixed on 20 October 2020 of the year, you can get the second part for free on the Epic Games Store.
October games 2020 – FIFA, Watch Dogs, Amnesia, Star Wars
In Amnesia: Rebirth we will play the role of Tasi Trianon, who lost her memory. Together with the heroine, we will try to discover the secrets of her past and explain how she ended up in the Algerian desert. In terms of gameplay, it is still good old Amnesia, which is confirmed by several minutes of gameplay. One thing seems certain – the dense atmosphere will often give you shivers down your spine. What PC will we need to be afraid in the new one in Amnesia? Older equipment is enough. Although the Frictional Games studio did not specify the processor models, it can be safely assumed that there are no newer units in them and, for example, in the case of Ryzen 5 it is rather 1600 than 3600. The list of cards in the recommended configuration also looks strange: GeForce GTX 680 against the Radeon RX 580, and there is also … Intel Xe-HPG (Frictional Games studio ran in the future). Here are the full hardware requirements for Amnesia: Rebirth:
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 460 or AMD Radeon HD 5750 or Intel HD 630 (OpenGL 4.0)
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 680 or AMD Radeon RX 580 or Intel Xe-HPG (OpenGL 4.3)
Disk
50 GB free space
50 GB of free space
Amnesia : Rebirth – gameplay shows that there is nothing to be afraid of for the game
In the past, you might have won Amnesia games for free, but if you did not get hold of the previous giveaways, it’s before the premiere of the new version y, which was scheduled for 20 October 2020, Epic Games Store released the second installment – Amnesia: A Machine for Pigs (and Costume Quest 2). You can add it to your account free of charge until 20 October until 17: 00 Polish time. Finally, we would like to remind you that Amnesia: Rebirth will debut not only on PC (Steam), but also on the PlayStation 4 console.
The war between console fans and computers is as old as the world. On the one hand, the fans argue that the PC gives more options for entertainment and work, and that repair and modernization are possible on their own. And the supporters of consoles argue that they are right to argue the lower price and simpler operation. What if both worlds could merge? Such a question, as usual, was asked by someone in China. Unique motherboards have recently appeared on the Aliexpress platform. They have a soldered APU chip in the form of AMD A9 – 9820, which probably comes from the Xbox One S console and offers performance similar to the Intel Core i5 processor – 7400, all at a much lower price.
Unique Chinese motherboard with AMD A9 chip – 9820 is available on Aliexpress. Its price is 125 dollars, which is approximately 489 zlotys.
Test Ryzen 5 3600 vs Core i5 – 10400 F on RTX 2060 SUPER and RX 5700 XT
The motherboard in question is available HERE, but its name remains unknown. We are talking about the CEB standard (305 x 267 mm), which is slightly wider than regular ATX (305 x 244 mm) On the brown laminate we find 8-core and 16 – threaded APU AMD A9 – 9820 running at clock 2, 35 GHz, paired with integrated AMD Radeon R7 graphics 350 with 512 shading units and clock rates up to 935 MHz. In addition, you can see a cooled, 6-phase power section, four slots for DDR3 memory, four SATA III connectors, one M.2 one PCI Express x1 slot. The I / O panel, although not shown directly, is two PS / 2, four USB 2.0, two USB 3.2 Gen 1 type A, HDMI, RJ – 45 and three audio connectors.
NZXT H1 Case Test – Xbox Series X better version?
You won’t find an APU chip like AMD A9 on the AMD website – 9820, but Chuwi uses them in his mini PC in the form of Chuwi AeroBox. More importantly, the Chinese manufacturer boasted some time ago that their AeroBoks use a motherboard similar to the one found in the Microsoft Xbox One S console. Thus, you can guess that AMD A9 – 9820 is actually an APU from the console, but probably the worst part of the waffle that did not meet the standards set out in the Microsoft-AMD contract. Thus, the Reds at the end of the life of the old Xbox simply decided to earn on the chips they had, which Chinese producers willingly used.
The seller on Aliexpress claims that the manufacturer of the discussed motherboard is Biostar, and the APU performance of AMD A9 – 9820 is to be comparable to the Intel Core processor i5 – 7400. While the former is quite possible, it is better to approach the latter with a distance. The question, however, is whether the price is actually 125 dollars (about 489 do we get an alternative to the Xbox One S? Theoretically? Yes. Practically? Not completely. The motherboards sold are used (but checked before shipment and in working order), in addition, the consumer needs his own RAM modules, data carrier, power supply and housing. Thus, the motherboard remains only a curiosity for DIY enthusiasts and people who are not afraid of the secondary market and
Project Quantum is a mini-computer concept originally introduced in 2015, in which a small computer is divided into two parts in an hourglass-like way.
AMD introduced the miniature Project Quantum minicomputer originally as early as a year 2015. The project never gave birth to computers that were actually sold, but was described by AMD as a concept car, for example, familiar from the automotive world.
The original Project Quantum included an Intel Core i7 – 4790 K processor and a graphics card based on two Fiji graphics chips. That project was originally buried because the computer wanted an AMD motherboard and processor, in addition to which the company had decided to target two Fiji Radeon Pro Duo players to professionals. A year later, it was rumored that the project would make a comeback as a solution based on Zen and Vega architectures, but it remained at the level of rumors.
Now Project Quantum has once again presented new signs of life, as Twitter user PeteB found 15. September 2020 AMD’s design patent describing the Project Quantum case. PeteB’s tweet was brought to wider awareness by the familiar leaker _rogame. The case described in the design patent still follows the original concept, in which the computer is divided into two sections, which are connected to each other in an hourglass-like manner through a thin center. The patent was applied for in February this year, so it is possible that AMD will eventually release the Project Quantum computer, which will go on sale
GPU-Z is preparing for the looming GPU launches with update 2.35.0, which adds support for the fast-approaching RX 6000 series GPUs from AMD, also known as Big Navi, and Intel’s DG1 graphics.
The RX 6000 series is AMD’s next generation of GPUs built on the RDNA2 architecture. These new GPUs will go toe-to-toe with Nvidia’s RTX 30 series Ampere GPUs.
AMD teased the graphics cards in its Zen 3 reveal and gave us a brief taste of RDNA2’s performance without revealing which RX 6000 series GPU the company used for the demo. However, results were impressive – the performance figures largely match the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 at a 4K resolution. AMD will share more information at the official reveal on 10/28/2020 at 10am PT.
The update also adds support for DG1 discrete graphics. Intel’s Xe DG1 chip comes mounted in a standard Add-In-Card (AIC) form factor for developers, but it will also come in Tiger Lake-powered laptops as a discrete GPU. Intel has already launched its Tiger Lake processors, but, curiously, the company still hasn’t dished on the expected arrival date for laptops with DG1 graphics. However, we continue to see persistent signs that they are moving closer to market. We expect to hear more from Intel about DG1 around CES or sooner.
Here are the rest of the updates included in GPU-Z’s 2.35.0 update:
Added BIOS saving for NVIDIA Ampere
Fixed memory size reporting on GeForce RTX 3090
Fixed DirectML detection on Windows 10 Insider 20231.1000
Improved fake detection for cards based on NVIDIA GT216 & GT218
Fixed Navi 12 Radeon Pro 5600M detection
On AMD Cape Verde use direct temperature readings if driver temps are broken.
Added support for NVIDIA A100 PCIe
Added support for Intel Comet Lake UHD Graphics (Core i5-10200H)
Added support for AMD Radeon HD 8210E, Barco MXRT-6700
You can go to TechPowerUp’s website here to grab the latest version of GPU-Z.
(Pocket-lint) – Larian had been cranking out solid games in the Divinity series for good few years before its reputation skyrocketed with the release of Divinity 2: Original Sin – it struck gold with its combination of role-playing fun and devilishly organic combat.
Now the developer has been given the keys to the castle so pined-after by developers around the world – an official Dungeons and Dragons license and the long-awaited third entry in the Baldur’s Gate franchise. Each bringing enormous new pressure.
But from the early access build of Baldur’s Gate 3 that we’ve been playing, it’s looking like something special once again.
A new, old start
The first two Baldur’s Gate games are straightforwardly seminal in the canon of interactive roleplaying; enormous adventures that were different for each player that played them through, with a large cast of memorable characters and storylines to sink into.
Baldur’s Gate 2 might have come out all of 20 years ago, but gamers have been awaiting a third entry that whole time since, in hope rather than expectation. Giving the rights to Larian, after the screaming success of Divinity 2, was a decision that seemed so sensible that it was almost to good to be true.
The world of Dungeons and Dragons, the Forbidden Realms in which Baldur’s Gate is in fact just one of many major cities, is clearly one that Larian has been able to slip into pretty seamlessly. Any developer of top-down role-playing games will have done its time in D&D, after all.
Story-wise, things get off to a lively start with an absolutely bombastic opening cinematic that sets the scene aboard the tentacled ship of a Mindflayer, an unambiguosly evil squid-face that’s infected the player character with a little brain tadpole of their own.
After creating a character of your own, replete with multiple races to pick from and a range of delightfully modeled faces to add to them, you’ll escape the doomed ship in a frightful crash before setting out to get said tadpole out of your cranium before you’re turned into a mindless zombie.
It doesn’t take long to assemble a cast of companions whose aims align with your own, and you’ll soon be off exploring a large coastal region in the hopes of discovering how to help yourself and, down the line, the world, by hindering the Mindflayer’s machinations.
In this early access build all of Act 1 is playable, with two more to come over the next year or so, meaning there’s going to be an absolute wealth of content to get through eventually.
Dividing your time
Much like in Divinity 2, your time is spent in a few primary ways in Baldur’s Gate 3 – exploring, talking and fighting. You’ll walk around the large areas figuring out what lies where and who you might want to talk to.
You’ll engage in dialogue with those characters, receive quests and requests from them, and find out more about how you can get closer to de-tadpoling yourself, and, of course, you’ll periodically get into scraps and fights. The conversations are as good as Larian’s best work – scripted evocatively and universally voice acted to a really high standard. Being rid of text-based mute conversations, even from the most minor side-characters, makes for a real feeling of quality.
These battles play out in turnbased style, using D&D’s initiative system to get a turn order and letting you move your party around and attack enemies in turn. There’s a good amount of synergy to explore between abilities and elements, although it’s a little less unhinged than Divinity 2’s elemental combat.
Still, it’s engaging stuff that gets more and more challenging as you progress, and the satisfaction of pulling off an unlikely victory is well worth the time it takes to do so. It might take a little getting used to how brutal D&D’s dice-based combat can be if you have a run of bad luck, but once you’re in the swing of things it’s pretty straightforward.
The levels you’ll be fighting in, meanwhile, are Larian’s finest to date on the visual side, with gorgeous colour palettes and background details selling the reality of the situation beautifully. We’re playing on the PC from our mid-range build, and its XFX AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT GPU makes the most of Ultra settings to really maximise the impact of that scenery, with details that you’ll notice constantly in the background.
Cranking down to lower settings still leaves you with a pretty game, though, if a slightly less sharp one. Character models are similarly delightful, too, with expressive and empathetic faces and detailed, grounded armours and clothing textures. The animation of those models can occasionally be a little janky, though, especially in dialogue, and that’s one area we imagine will receive some touching up as the early access build develops.
Bug squashing
It’s worth zooming in on that side of things, though – Larian is doing early access in the true spirit of the system, here. This really is an in-progress build of the game, with hotfixes coming thick and fast to tie up bugs and improve elements, and that does mean a necessary dose of breakages.
You’ll see slightly bugged animations, or odd visual glitches like models not loading into cutscenes, and sometimes movement or even entire questlines will simply break either a little or completely. This means frequent saving is your best friend, and running multiple saves in case of progress loss is sensible too.
We don’t mention this as a criticism, but more as a warning. Larian is being nice and upfront about this side of things, so we don’t think it should surprise anyone, but nonetheless if you want a fully polished and bug-free experience, you should follow Larian’s advice and wait for the full 1.0 release, which is likely to arrive in late 2021 as things stand.
Best Xbox One deals for Amazon Prime Day 2020: Games, accessories and more
First Impressions
Until then, though, Baldur’s Gate 3 is looking like a delightful treat for PC gamers before the glut of next-gen console launches arrives. It’s got a deep adventure to offer with a range of companions that are impressivesly nuanced and fun to engage with, and combat that’ll keep you thinking.
Early access versions are a minefield, so you can’t really afford to come into Baldur’s Gate expecting a totally smooth time – that simply won’t happen. For now, though, there’s still a whole lot of adventurous fun to be had, and Larian’s world design has never looked so luminous and gorgeous.
Writing by Max Freeman-Mills. Editing by Mike Lowe.
While we love building PCs (especially the best PC builds), sometimes it’s more convenient or even cheaper to buy a prebuilt desktop. The good news is that, as we get closer to the holiday season and retailers try to clear out inventory, we’re seeing some incredible sales on gaming PCs.
On any given day, you may to see gaming PC deals on a variety of systems, ranging from budget rigs with GTX 1660 cards for less than $700 to RTX-enabled systems for far less than $1,500 or even models that are on par with the best gaming PCs.
That’s why we’re collecting the best deals on gaming PCs below. If you’re more interested in building your own PC or upgrading what you have, see our lists of best tech deals overall, best monitor deals or best SSD deals.
ABS Gladiator Gaming PC (Core i7, RTX 2070 Super): was $1,599 now $1,099.
The ABS Gladiator is a good all-around setup that has the bonus of coming with a wired Gamdias mouse and keyboard combo as well as a copy of Marvel’s Avengers. It has an Intel Core i7-9700K, an RTX 2070 Super GPU, 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD.View Deal
Alienware R11 w/ RTX 3080, 16GB, 1TB + 512GB: was $2429, now $2381 @Dell
The sleek Aurora R11 uses liquid cooling to keep itself operating at tip-top efficiency. This configuration comes with an overclockable Core i7-10700KF CPU, 16GB of dual-channel HyperX Fury RAM and dual SSDs.View Deal
ABS Master Gaming PC (AMD Ryzen 5, RTX 2060): was $1,199 now $899 @ NeweggNewegg’s popular ABS Challenger deal might be sold out now, but if you’re willing to go a step up, you can still get the ABS Master deal. This comes with an AMD Ryzen 5-3600 processor, an RTX 2060 GPU, 16GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD all inside a transparent RGB-laden case.View Deal
Corsair One i145 Compact (Core i7, RTX 2080 Super) : was $2,899 now $2,399 @ Best Buy
This Mini-ITX small form computer still packs a decent amount of power for its frame, coming with an Intel Core i7-9700K processor, GeForce RTX 2080 Super GPU, 32GB of RAM and 2TB HDD. It’s also got RGB built directly into its case.View Deal
CLX SET (Ryzen 9, RTX 2070 Super): was $1,999 now $1,840 @ Best Buy
The CLX SET Gaming desktop is an 18.5 x 18.3 x 8.3 inch desktop with a transparent side panel and RGB components. Its black and red color scheme fits its Ryzen 9-3900X CPU, which it backs up with an RTX 2070 Super GPU, 16GB of RAM, a 240GB SSD and a 2TB HDD.View Deal
Corsair One (Core i9, RTX 2080 Ti): was $3,499 now $3,199 @Best Buy
The Corsair One is a 15 x 7.9 x 6.8 inch desktop that has built-in RGB on its case and features some of the most powerful specs of the last gen of hardware. That means an Intel Core i9-9900K CPU, an RTX 2080 Ti GPU, 32GB of RAM, a 1TB SSD and a 2TB HDD.View Deal
ABS Challenger Gaming PC (Core i5, GTX 1660 Super): was $999 now $899 @Newegg
This budget PC bundle gives you enough power to stay competitive in the current gaming landscape plus a keyboard and a mouse. With it, you’ll get a case with a transparent side panel, plenty of RGB, an Intel Core i5-10400 CPU, a GTX 1660 Super GPU, 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD and a wired Gamdias keyboard/mouse combo. View Deal
Lenovo Legion 5i (Core i7, GTX 1660 Super): was $1,249 now $999 @Lenovo
Here’s a desktop with a…unique case. The shark-finned Lenovo Legion 5i comes with a 10th gen Intel Core i7-10700 processor with vPro, a GTX 1660 Super GPU, 8GB of RAM and a 1TB HDD. Snag it for $999 with coupon code SEMISALE2020.View Deal
Lenovo Legion 5i (Core i5, RX 5500): was $999, now $799 @ Lenovo
If you want a shark-fin case but don’t need shark-level power, Lenovo currently has a decent Intel/AMD hybrid tower up for $799 with coupon code SEMISALE2020. This gaming pc comes with an Intel Core i5-10400F CPU, a Radeon 5500 GPU, 8GB of RAM and a 1TB HDD.View Deal
HP Pavilion Gaming Desktop (AMD Ryzen 5 3500, RX 550): was $719, now $619 @HP
What if you want an inexpensive gaming desktop? HP’s all-AMD HP Pavilion has you covered. It’s got an AMD Ryzen 5 3500 CPU, a Radeon RX 550 GPU, 8GB of RAM and a 1TB HDD. You can also customize it at checkout. View Deal
HP Omen 30L (AMD Ryzen 9 3900, RX 5700XT): was $1,579 now $1,379 @HP
If you’re looking for a good high-end AMD desktop, HP’s sleek new Omen is a good start. It’s got a case with plenty of lighting and RGB plus a transparent side to show it off, and both an AMD CPU and GPU. You’ll get a Ryzen 9 3900 processor (w/RGB cooling), an RX 5700 GPU, 8GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD. Plus, you can customize it further.View Deal
iBuyPower Element (Core i7, GTX 1660): was $1,099, now $949 @ Best Buy
This iBuyPower Element Gaming Desktop deal is a good choice for anyone who doesn’t want to buy separate accessories. You’ll get an iBuyPower wired keyboard and mouse combo, plus a PC with an Intel Core i7-9700F, a GTX 1660, 16GB of RAM, a 2TB HDD and a 240GB SSD.View Deal
The MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Gaming X Trio is the company’s premium offering based on NVIDIA’s landmark RTX 3080 “Ampere” graphics card released earlier this week. The Gaming X brand represents a category-defining line of graphics cards by MSI that combine premium factory-overclocked performance with aesthetics that go with contemporary DIY gaming PC builds. The new Gaming X board design sees the use of a large triple-slot, triple-fan cooling solution to tame the overclocked RTX 3080, along with more visible ARGB lighting elements than the previous generation. The company figured out that when installed in the case, the backplate and top of the card are more visible than the front with the fan intakes. We also see better symmetry in the design and arrangement of the three fans.
The GeForce RTX 3080 is being labeled by NVIDIA as their new flagship product, with a promise of bringing AAA 4K UHD gaming with raytracing at price-points previously held by 1440p-class graphics cards. The RTX 3080 is also designed to offer high refresh-rate gameplay at 1440p and 1080p resolutions. The new Ampere graphics architecture by NVIDIA heralds the 2nd generation of the company’s path-breaking RTX real-time raytracing technology. NVIDIA perfected a means of combining traditional raster 3D graphics with certain real-time raytraced elements, such as lighting, shadow, reflections, ambient occlusion, and global illumination, to make the hybrid raster+raytraced 3D scene as true to life as possible.
The 2nd generation RTX technology with Ampere sees NVIDIA introduce a new double-throughput CUDA core that can process concurrent FP32+INT32 operations; the 2nd generation RT core has fixed-function hardware to process temporal elements of raytracing, enabling new RTX effects, such as raytraced motion blur, an effect that was earlier post-processed and inaccurate; and the new 3rd generation Tensor core that shares much of its design with the heavy-duty Tensor cores of the A100 Tensor Core AI HPC processor NVIDIA launched this Spring, which leverages the sparsity phenomenon in deep-learning neural nets to increase AI inference performance by an order of magnitude.
NVIDIA has also more than doubled the SIMD horsepower of the RTX 3080 over its predecessor, the RTX 2080, with a staggering 8,704 CUDA cores, 68 RT cores, 272 tensor cores, 272 TMUs, and 96 ROPs. To feed all this compute muscle, NVIDIA has also significantly upgraded the memory solution—10 GB of new GDDR6X memory clocked at 19 Gbps over a 320-bit wide memory interface, which works out to 760 GB/s of bandwidth, a 70% increase over the previous generation. The new “GA102” silicon at the heart of the RTX 3080 is built on a new 8 nm silicon fabrication process Samsung designed specially for NVIDIA. The card also takes advantage of PCI-Express 4.0 x16, which means it is ready for new-generation desktop platforms.
The MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Gaming X Trio builds on NVIDIA’s strengths with a powerful new board design capable of powering the RTX 3080 with up to 525 W of power even though the chip’s TDP is around 340 W. The card sticks to conventional 8-pin PCIe power inputs, and its cooling solution features multiple aluminium fin stacks held together by seven 6 mm-thick copper heat pipes that make direct contact with the GPU at the base; these are ventilated by 95 mm fans.
With a length of 32 cm, the card isn’t extremely long, which should have it fit inside most mid-tower cases. MSI is bolstering the RTX 3080 with factory-overclocked speeds of 1815 MHz GPU Boost (vs. 1710 MHz reference). The memory is left untouched. MSI is pricing the Gaming X Trio at $760, a $60 premium over the NVIDIA baseline price of $700 for the RTX 3080. In this review, we put the MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Gaming X Trio through its paces to see if it is a better value proposition than the RTX 3080 Founders Edition we reviewed yesterday.
GeForce RTX 3080 Market Segment Analysis
Price
Shader
Units
ROPs
Core
Clock
Boost
Clock
Memory
Clock
GPU
Transistors
Memory
GTX 1080 Ti
$650
3584
88
1481 MHz
1582 MHz
1376 MHz
GP102
12000M
11 GB, GDDR5X, 352-bit
RX 5700 XT
$370
2560
64
1605 MHz
1755 MHz
1750 MHz
Navi 10
10300M
8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit
RTX 2070
$340
2304
64
1410 MHz
1620 MHz
1750 MHz
TU106
10800M
8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit
RTX 2070 Super
$450
2560
64
1605 MHz
1770 MHz
1750 MHz
TU104
13600M
8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit
Radeon VII
$680
3840
64
1802 MHz
N/A
1000 MHz
Vega 20
13230M
16 GB, HBM2, 4096-bit
RTX 2080
$600
2944
64
1515 MHz
1710 MHz
1750 MHz
TU104
13600M
8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit
RTX 2080 Super
$690
3072
64
1650 MHz
1815 MHz
1940 MHz
TU104
13600M
8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit
RTX 2080 Ti
$1000
4352
88
1350 MHz
1545 MHz
1750 MHz
TU102
18600M
11 GB, GDDR6, 352-bit
RTX 3070
$500
5888
64
1500 MHz
1725 MHz
1750 MHz
GA104
17400M
8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit
RTX 3080
$700
8704
96
1440 MHz
1710 MHz
1188 MHz
GA102
28000M
10 GB, GDDR6X, 320-bit
MSI RTX 3080 Gaming X Trio
$760
8704
96
1485 MHz
1815 MHz
1188 MHz
GA102
28000M
10 GB, GDDR6X, 320-bit
RTX 3090
$1500
10496
112
1395 MHz
1695 MHz
1219 MHz
GA102
28000M
24 GB, GDDR6X, 384-bit
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