My hard drive is 500 gb and I've almost filled half of it just with games in just short of a year. The problem with external hard drives is that they have to be run out of a USB slot, meaning that the accessing of data is slower than that of an internal one which, if your computer can only just run a game, may cause the lag you just don't want.gmaverick019 said:no? how smal and how old is your hard drive? i just got a 750 gb hard drive for like 40 bucks, so really its not that big of a deal.
im happy they are getting ths big, as long as everything else keeps up at a decent rate im fine with it
You see I have the other side of the coin, unlimited quotas with a shitty speed since I live in the countryside and have to get my internet through an antenna. In short, my average download speed is 30 kb/s (ranges from anything between 1.6 mb/s to 1 byte/s). I have basically left my computer on non-stop for the last 2 weeks just trying to download that pack and I still have about 7 more games to goLawlessSquirrel said:I too bought the THQ pack, and so far have not been able to download a single game lest I be struggling to maintain my internet quota for the rest of the month. So basically, I have a load of games to play, but will have to wait until my net's nearing it's uncap day to minimise impact to get 1, maybe 2 games per month.
Freaking internet quotas...
Exactly, best example of this being in effect is the fact that Left 4 Dead 2 has more content, better graphics and an extra campaign compared to Left 4 Dead but almost 1gb less space required and lower computer requirements and that puts it under the 5gb bracket.migo said:I hate this mentality that because storage space is cheap it's fine to make games obnoxiously big. µTorrent is great because it's so small, and uses very little RAM and CPU cycles. It has just as many features as far more bloated programs. That should really be the philosiphy behind everything if possible. It's perfectly feasible for XBLA devs to make good, full featured games coming in at less than 1GB, and often less than 100MB - why is there a need for 10GB games? Most of the time you should be able to do without it.
You know those are not excluding, don't you?Sarkule said:I'd rather have a game that takes up lots of room, and has good gameplay and graphics. Than have a game that is small, and has bad graphics.
How about, a 1TB dive for $60-$80? Unless you're talking about USB external, which tends to rip you off a little from the get-go, as buyers of externals tend to be desperate for space.Wolfram01 said:2 500gb HDDs for $100 = all the room you need
Owned.SyphonX said:How about, a 1TB dive for $60-$80? Unless you're talking about USB external, which tends to rip you off a little from the get-go, as buyers of externals tend to be desperate for space.Wolfram01 said:2 500gb HDDs for $100 = all the room you need
I wish developers would not limit their games to certain size limits. Most PC gamers tend to get pretty pissed off, because they will limit broad, expansive games due to console limitations, and not bother with a more complex PC version.
I would seriously buy a 50GB game or higher. No problems with that. So long as it's a good game. Think, Morrowind or Oblivion with no "size constraints" illusion.
To those people who claim the current sizes are already too big, and that they can't even play 2 year old games on the lowest settings.... well, no offense, but stop your whining. That says to me that you have a vastly old computer, with virtually no money or effort into upgrading it. Might I suggest you just switch to a console, and deal with what you can get there.
After I get done modding games like Oblivion, and Fallout 3, and I've added all the bells and whistles I want, including increased resolution texture packs and weapon kits or NPC/Monster additions ranging in the hundreds to thousands of additions. After-the-fact, my installation folder is likely to be over 20-30GB. Which is almost how it should have been in the first place.