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12 votes
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PS5 Teardown: An up-close and personal look at the console hardware
9 votes -
Oculus’ new Quest 2 VR headset starts at $299 and ships October 13th
12 votes -
Do you own a VR headset?
I recently got my significant other into Eurotruck Simulator 2 and was given the go-ahead to purchase a VR headset so that we can better experience the various sim games out there. Unfortunately,...
I recently got my significant other into Eurotruck Simulator 2 and was given the go-ahead to purchase a VR headset so that we can better experience the various sim games out there. Unfortunately, the complete Valve Index package is back-ordered about 8 weeks so it will be a while before I can take the plunge and buy one.
Was just curious though if anyone here also has a VR headset and what their experience has been with it. I had a 1st generation Oculus Rift a long time ago but ended up selling it since I felt the software wasn't there (2016) and I could really only play the seated experiences with a 360 controller so I felt I was behind the curve even on my 1st purchase.
Some prompts to help spur discussion, but feel free to share what you would like to share:
- How often do you play on your headset?
- What games/experiences would you recommend?
- What games/experiences do you not recommend?
- What headset do you own/have you tried any others?
- Are there any accessories or peripherals that are worth checking out?
13 votes -
G-Boy: Wii / GameCube Portable DIY Kit
9 votes -
PiBoy DMG Raspberry Pi 4 Kit
3 votes -
A new Nintendo Switch model will be announced next year, a new report claims
13 votes -
Time killers: The strange history of wrist gaming
3 votes -
Playing full PC games on a Raspberry Pi 4
6 votes -
Sega Game Gear Micro announced
12 votes -
Looking for hardware recommendations for Steam gaming on my TV
Latest update here. Thanks to everyone who helped me out! I have an Nvidia Shield hooked up to my TV, and it's great for Android games and emulation. I'm looking for similar hardware that will...
Latest update here. Thanks to everyone who helped me out!
I have an Nvidia Shield hooked up to my TV, and it's great for Android games and emulation. I'm looking for similar hardware that will allow me to play my Steam library on the TV.1 It doesn't have to be as small as the Shield TV, but I'm not interested in having a giant tower hooked up in my living room. Basically, I want what those old Steam Machines promised before fizzling out.
What I'm looking for:
- Pre-configured
- Able to support wireless controllers through Bluetooth
- Able to play smaller, less demanding games flawlessly
- Would be nice if it could play more demanding titles, but this is not a must
- Has decent cooling (I'm worried that boxes not designed for gaming will get way too hot)
- Price point: undetermined so far -- I'm willing to pay what I need to, but I want to see what's out there before committing to anything
- Would like to be able to set it up to basically be a seamless "console" if possible, where I can boot right into Steam (or easily get there with a controller) and not have to use a keyboard and mouse (I do have a Steam controller but I would rather use an 8BitDo SN30 Pro+ as my primary input method)
Searching around, here's what I've found so far:
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The System 76 Meerkat is a mini PC that looks great (and I'm partial to the company), but I don't know how it would perform with gaming. Also, I haven't decided if I want the (small) amounts of friction that come with gaming on Linux on my TV or not.
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Intel NUCs seems to be popular, and they have some gaming-focused models at higher price points.
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The MSI Trident 3 is explicitly gaming-focused and has a dedicated cooling system. Might be overkill for what I need though?
Here are my main questions:
- What other hardware options are out there that I don't know about?
- What hardware profile and price point should I be targeting for my needs? How little is too little, and how much is too much?
- Are there any pitfalls to this kind of setup that I'm not aware of?
I'm open to any and all suggestions, as this kind of stuff is all a bit over my head so it's hard for me to even know what I'm looking for. I haven't even decided that this is definitely something I'm going to do yet, since there's such a wide range in price and performance. Instead what I'm trying to do is figure out what my needs are and then which models (if any) would fit them best.
1: I do have a Steam Link and have tried the app, but the quality for me has been spotty enough that I would rather have native hardware playing them than trying to stream it from my laptop.
7 votes -
Nintendo Switch is sold out everywhere, so this guy built one himself
11 votes -
Inside PlayStation 5: The specs and the tech that deliver Sony's next-gen vision
15 votes -
Inside Xbox Series X: The full technical specs
5 votes -
The story of how Microsoft's Kinect grew from a skunkworks motion-controller project into a company-wide effort with massive resources, and was eventually abandoned
6 votes -
Alienware’s Concept UFO prototype imagines a gaming PC that’s shaped like a Nintendo Switch
12 votes -
Pour one out for the Steam Controller, now on closeout sale for just $5 plus shipping
27 votes -
Tilt Five: Holographic Tabletop Gaming - Augmented Reality glasses that open up a whole new holographic game space
12 votes -
The best game controller buttons of all time
9 votes -
Modern games look amazing on CRT monitors
23 votes -
The new Nintendo Switch review: The updated Tegra X1 tested in depth
10 votes -
Digital Foundry Direct Retro - Nintendo's Famicom Disk System, a 1986 Japan-only mass-storage upgrade for the console
5 votes -
Internal Nintendo memo instructs customer service to fix "Joy-Con drift" for free, even outside warranty period
14 votes -
The Nintendo Switch’s Joy-Con drift problem, explained
13 votes -
New standard Switch model coming in August/September will improve battery life forty to eighty percent
13 votes -
Nintendo Switch Lite announced - $199 on September 20th
22 votes -
Does anyone use a trackball mouse?
I've been curious about making a switch for ergonomics and just lack of space on my desk. Do you recommend it for gaming? Any guidance on genres that do or don't work? I mostly play real time and...
I've been curious about making a switch for ergonomics and just lack of space on my desk.
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Do you recommend it for gaming? Any guidance on genres that do or don't work? I mostly play real time and turn based strategy games or point-and-click style games such as Diablo on my computer. I don't generally go in for twitchy FPSes, but I'd like the option.
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Opinions on index vs. thumb?
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How long was the adjustment period to get used to it?
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Any recommendations on good ones to buy?
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Are there any advantages I'm not thinking of besides just being better for my wrist?
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Disadvantages besides, potentially, being less precise than a mouse?
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Are there any tradeoffs with going wireless?
9 votes -
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TurboGrafx-16 mini | Announcement trailer
6 votes -
Playdate, the most exciting device in indie gaming, is also the most depressing: The recently announced system shows that indie games can be just as myopic and male-centered as the medium’s mainstream
8 votes -
Playdate. A new handheld gaming system.
27 votes -
Switch's 'boost mode' tested: What is it and how does it work?
8 votes -
What are some examples in gaming of things that were ahead of their time?
I recently read a book about Nintendo and Sega in the 90s, and it reminded me of something I'd long forgotten: the Sega Channel. The idea that the Sega Genesis had a digital delivery system in...
I recently read a book about Nintendo and Sega in the 90s, and it reminded me of something I'd long forgotten: the Sega Channel.
The idea that the Sega Genesis had a digital delivery system in 1994 is wild to me. For comparison, Steam didn't have its first release until 2003, nearly ten years later!
What are some other examples of games, hardware, or ideas that were ahead of their time?
16 votes -
Capcom Home Arcade - A "classic console" in the form of an arcade stick, with sixteen Capcom arcade games
7 votes -
A user on the /r/NintendoSwitch subreddit: "I disassembled a Joycon stick to shed some light on why drifting occurs"
32 votes -
In total control - From the arcades to the living room, how the controller has evolved—and why one tech historian, Benj Edwards, started building his own
7 votes -
The forgotten Nintendo tech that makes GameCube HDMI possible
17 votes -
Sega Dreamcast at twenty: The futuristic games console that came too soon
28 votes -
Controller gaming on PC
21 votes -
Polymega launch trailer
8 votes -
Nvidia announces RTX 2000 GPU series with ‘six times more performance’ and ray-tracing
30 votes -
Intel Graphics teases first PC graphics card for 2020
@intelgraphics: We will set our graphics free. #SIGGRAPH2018 https://t.co/vAoSe4WgZX
27 votes -
Switch's mobile mode analysed in detail (and the hardware mod that makes it possible)
6 votes -
The GameCube controller’s A button subtly taught us how to play
21 votes -
What is the best casual game console?
The back story is that I’m currently deciding whether to get a PS4 or a Nintendo Switch. But instead of just a “what’s your fave” thread I want to take this opportunity to turn it into a proper...
The back story is that I’m currently deciding whether to get a PS4 or a Nintendo Switch.
But instead of just a “what’s your fave” thread I want to take this opportunity to turn it into a proper discussion which console you think is filling the casual gamer needs better, why and how.
Including the gamesNow, my personal feeling – and I never owned a game console before myself, but have gamed on the PC before – it seems to me like Nintendo is trying to cater to the casual gamer who wants to wind down and perhaps play some fun games with friends during a party. While Sony and Microsoft seem to me to aim more at gamers who want a more immersive experience and play either alone or if with others in a more competitive/rival way.
16 votes -
Report: Google courting developers for coming game-streaming service
11 votes -
Valve revamps its next controller, should make using hands in VR feel way cooler
12 votes -
The ASUS ROG phone has a 90HZ screen, vapor cooling, and a plethora of gaming accessories
6 votes -
In the lab with Xbox's new Adaptive Controller, which may change gaming forever
13 votes -
‘Fortnite,’ ‘PUBG’ led to rocketing headset sales, Turtle Beach says
7 votes