Whereabouts are you from? I have a PS2 and Def Jam: Fight for NY along with like 15-20 other games in excellent condition.
Ha ha U am in Cheshire
Whereabouts are you from? I have a PS2 and Def Jam: Fight for NY along with like 15-20 other games in excellent condition.
I still have my PS2, PS3 and PS4. Wish I'd kept the PS1
https://www.windowscentral.com/xbox-live-gold-just-became-worst-deal-gaming-history
You see this trash? MS basically shooting itself in the asshole.
And MS just reversed course and said they messed up. And they're making F2P games not require a Gold subscription.
MS definitely knew what it was doing since there are pictures of 6 month Live cards for $60 already at retailers. It wasn't a rash decision they made the night before and then admitted fault. This was carefully planned and they back off when the backlash happened.
How can I make sure I can get hold of an RTX3060 on release day?
They'll likely significantly hike up the price of Game Pass over time instead, and that's at least reasonable.
They might also start offering shittier games with Gold for good measure as a "punishment" and to maximize their profit this way instead.
The fact you have to pay such money (or even any money) for Gold has always been ridiculous in the first place. Everyone's paying big money for a service that costs Microsoft next to nothing to run. The ads in the dashboard make them many times more money than what Xbox traffic costs them. It's just something they're charging for because they can and people are willing to put up with it. They thought they can get away with making even more to maximize their profits but ran into a roadblock, and that's no biggie since the price increase was not dictated by a need to cover any increasing costs on their end. They'll happily continue charging $60 a year for something that likely costs them less than a dollar. Or any amount that people will gladly pay, as it's a charge for basically nothing + some free old games.
I'd just get a 3060Ti now. It's a significantly better card, for not much more, and it's been out for two months, so while availability isn't great you're more likely to get it somewhere and it might even be now. The 3060 Ti is just a slightly cut-down 3070 for $399, while the 3060 is a lower end chip altogether for $329.
If the 3060 launch goes anywhere like it did for the other 3000 series cards, odds of getting it on release day are quite low, even if you're there the second your local retailers make it available, you're logged into your account with payment details in and practiced speed-running through the check-out process, which is what people did for the earlier launches. Not gonna lie, I got the 3080 but it was over a month after launch (went immediately out of stock at launch) and it was a fairly time consuming process involving setting up notifications on reddit and discord and failing many times until I managed to find one in stock and check out on time. Some people use bots, but they're expensive and retailers have gotten quite good at fighting against them.
There is a chance there will be more inventory at launch for the 3060, and it's also a still good card that tech reviewers largely advised against compared to the 3060 Ti, so there is a chance that the "be super-ready at launch" method might actually work.
I'd just get a 3060Ti now. It's a significantly better card, for not much more, and it's been out for two months, so while availability isn't great you're more likely to get it somewhere and it might even be now. The 3060 Ti is just a slightly cut-down 3070 for $399, while the 3060 is a lower end chip altogether for $329.
If the 3060 launch goes anywhere like it did for the other 3000 series cards, odds of getting it on release day are quite low, even if you're there the second your local retailers make it available, you're logged into your account with payment details in and practiced speed-running through the check-out process, which is what people did for the earlier launches. Not gonna lie, I got the 3080 but it was over a month after launch (went immediately out of stock at launch) and it was a fairly time consuming process involving setting up notifications on reddit and discord and failing many times until I managed to find one in stock and check out on time. Some people use bots, but they're expensive and retailers have gotten quite good at fighting against them.
There is a chance there will be more inventory at launch for the 3060, and it's also a still good card that tech reviewers largely advised against compared to the 3060 Ti, so there is a chance that the "be super-ready at launch" method might actually work.
Did you not use those bots that snag one for you? Or are they used to buy in large quantities? If you know how to use/program one, might be worth using it to get just one unit for yourself, if it's that difficult to get otherwise.
The bots that people use are more sophisticated and under constant development, since there's been an arms race between them and the retailers. You have to pay quite a lot to use them so it wouldn't make sense to do so just to grab one console, or card, or a Ryzen CPU. Most people would use notification bots, which is what I went with. I refused to pay any middle men who profited on the situation.
In other news, Stadia shuttered its first party dev team. In typical Google fashion, Google is throwing in the towel on something it created.
I think Google knows that the only thing that could save Stadia is if it went the Netflix route, or "Microsoft GamePass without a console" route - pay $x per month, and play any games you want in your browser on your potato PC, or even just your TV. Because let's not forget that buying games in services like Stadia are a gamble that you will never recover the money you poured into it once it goes out of business, which is more likely than not. The Nvidia model is at least better in a way that they're basically renting you a high end PC remotely, to play games that you own yourself on platforms that likely won't be going away until you die. Even if Nvidia disappeared altogether, you can still play those games using your own hardware, and odds are by that time even a potato PC of its time will be able to play them as these are getting faster.
Even then I think companies underestimate how much people enjoy owning their own hardware, be it a console, or a PC good enough to play their favorite games without having to tie themselves to a yet another monthly subscription. Services are just that, their prices, terms, and contents change, making them volatile - your favorite game might be there one year for $15/month, next year it might go away, replaced by others for $30/month. At this point the lifecycles of consoles and PC hardware have increased tremendously - you can play almost every game there is on a console you bought in 2013 for $500. At the same time if your favorite game was released back then you could've paid $20-50 for it once and played it without having to pay a cent ever since. You will also be able to always go back to it as long as you Xbox is working, kind of like I can go back to my favorite Dreamcast games launched over 20 years ago for free, it's forever yours, with no risk of it ever going away. You paid for it, and nobody has any rights to influence your ability to play that game, ever. I find that there is a lot more value and just peace of mind in owning hardware and owning your game/license keys yourself, or even with a robust platform like Steam, which is the second best - if you paid $20 for a game there 15 years ago, today you can still play it even on your potato work laptop with 0 additional fees charged ever since.
I see. I didn't know they were that expensive to get a hold of. I figured it was a $50-100 script that would at least guarantee you a unit but I don't think I'd pay more than $50 to get one on launch day, if I wanted one on launch day.
In other news, Stadia shuttered its first party dev team. In typical Google fashion, Google is throwing in the towel on something it created.
I need a notification bot for the 3060 GPU. My son is looking to build a PC but crypto mining is making it impossible to find any value
In my envy of the PS exclusives, I got my hands on Horizon Zero Dawn. I'll give it a spin this weekend. Same with Yakuza 0, which is what was recommended as the one to start with.
I remember hearing the term "Yakuza" 20ish years ago and I remembered a game for the Xbox that had it in its title. After looking around for a while to see if it was the Yakuza series, I found the name of the game and it looks like it had nothing to do with the Yakuza series. It was Wreckless: The Yakuza Missions.