I wanted to ask if I can play all my games with my GTX 1060 and 16 GB Ram or which games would force the card to its knees.
So games like z.b. Minecraft and Fortnite are probably running at least 60-100 FPS (Fortnite) and 100-350 FPS (Minecraft).
How well would the graphics card run at high settings in games that have pretty good graphics or are very tacky?
If you need more data from the computer, I'll write it to you.
You should also add the desired resolution. The 1060 is a FullHD graphics card.
If you play with 2560 x 1440 or even 4K, it is inadequate. Also for VR glasses like the HTC Vive she is too tired.
With the latest games, it will be difficult to set high details AND have high frame rates.
For Fortnite you can also put a potato in the slot, that does not need anything. Think so you're good at it, even if you can play more demanding games like Ark etc. Not with the highest resolution and settings fluently.
But you say yours? If you already have it you can just try it.
Play Fortnite with ner 960 and i5 7400. On Epic you have 30-40 fps. So much for a potato
Have a gaming laptop (Predator Helios 300)
So the screen is 1080x1920
Have 1050, but only i3 and it runs with almost everything on epic with solid 60fps. Of course it was an exaggeration, but who cares when buying a graphics card, please, whether Fortnite runs well?
Nagut 30-40 would be halfway ok if you are not a professional player or you have to pay attention to the FPS.
But nagut, if you want it liquid 60 should already be in there.
Try the page https://systemanforderungen.com/.
There you select a game and enter your hardware data below. Also an overclocking of the CPU and Graka can be considered.
However, only up to 60FPS will be displayed. All about it call the "60 + FPS".
However, these "evaluations" are only theoretical calculations.
Reference data are read from tables and offset against each other. It comes with certainty to inaccuracies. See it as a possible trend.
For a general and rough assessment, it is definitely suitable.
In the gaming laptop you have a GTX 1060 in the mobile version. This brings significantly less power, since it has to cope with the thermal situation in a notebook. Therefore, it clocks lower and throttles depending on the notebook.
The question of whether the GTX 1060 is sufficient, is not so exciting with notebook owners, because you can't replace them.
The notebooks with a really good graphics chip are at the same time very loud, very clunky and very expensive.
As far as I know there are no pruned M-chips in the 10 ** series anymore. Can only happen at most that the cooling is not sufficient and therefore the chip temporarily throttles something.
The clock rate is lower to my knowledge per se: https://www.notebookcheck.net/...598.0.html
In addition, the heat development in the tight notebook case is a huge problem. Depending on the notebook there are significant performance differences. The notebook manufacturers decide for themselves which clock rates they allow.
Well, just over 100 Hz. But the chip is the same? If the cooling is sufficient, you could simply raise the clock rate and has the same line as the tower.
And to open the notebook, expand the motherboard and the peripherals, install it in a self-adapted housing with self-cooling, so that the cooling allows higher clock rates - it makes more sense to buy a PC.
If you have ever opened a current notebook - and compared the existing common cooling solution for the soldered CPU and GPU with the cooling solutions in the desktop area, you will reject the idea.
I did not have the idea to put the inner life in a new case, I just wanted to tell you that these "mobile versions" are no longer available. Today is actually the same chip in there, where against former yes simply any beginner chips were hochgelabelt, so you could sell them as * 80M and thus could suggest the customer "a lot of power".
I already understood that. I answered your idea:
"If the cooling is sufficient, you could simply raise the clock rate and has the same line as the tower."
This is a wrong idea that I wanted to correct by my explanation, since the cooling in the notebook can never be as good as in the tower.
Well, but there are already quite potent cooling solutions. There was even a laptop with an integrated water cooling, which was connected via the docking station.
Strangely, in such notebook but no 1060iger chip soldered, but completely different hardware. ^^