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Ultra Battlebox: Building a Battlefield 3 PC For Under $1,600

By MaximumPC, published 28-11-2011

You can't get the full BF3 experience on a console, but what does it take to get it on a PC? In an age of sloppy console ports, Battlefield 3 is a huge relief for PC gamers. Not only is the PC a “lead platform” for DICE’s flagship modern shooter, but we’re getting all the good stuff: 64-player maps? You won’t find ‘em on a console. DirectX 11 graphics? Only on a PC, Sparky. Indeed, Battlefield 3’s Frostbite 2 engine brings fully destructible environments, ambient occlusion, MLAA, and full DX11 support—and it reaches its full potential only on the PC. But with great power comes great power requirements: DICE’s minimum recommended GPU is a GeForce GTX 560 or AMD Radeon HD 6950, and performance scales up from there. That means a lot of us are going to have to go get new vide...

21 New Rules for Technology: A Maximum Manifesto

By MaximumPC, published 05-12-2011

Four Score and… no, that’s not going to work. We the People of the Geek World, in Order to form a more perfect Desktop… no, that probably won’t work either. The Founding Fathers had it easy. Alas, there’s really no “Geek manifesto” that I can quote from, nor any real historical document that I can pilfer and humorously change, to reflect the modern-day demands of geek consumers. Look, there’s no reason why you should let hardware and software manufacturers dictate terms for how you go about your daily geek life. Whether you’re a hardware hacker or a Best Buy shopper who just wants to get the latest gadgets sans fuss, it’s up to you to demand that all of your technological interactions meet a bare minimum of standards. Why? Doesn’t it make you mad when ...

Multiscreen Madness: We Test Four Incredible Display Setups

By MaximumPC, published 05-09-2011

Because one screen is never enough! We set our sights on finding the best multiscreen setup for gaming Three of the more hardcore gamers on staff served as our intrepid testers. Last month’s review of Samsung’s MD230X6 six-screen Eyefinity display got us thinking big. We were awestruck by the majesty of so much screen real estate—particularly in games, where a screen config of massive proportions provides a level of immersion that a single screen, or even two screens, can’t come close to matching. But the MD230X6 wasn’t perfect, as our review revealed. This got us wondering: Would just three of the 23-inch displays side-by-side make for a more satisfying all-around experience? Would it be as encompassing in games? What if we could take three large displays and turn them vertical...

AMD vs Nvidia: 10 Videocards Go Head-to-Head

By MaximumPC, published 02-11-2011

A new generation of GPUs from Nvidia and AMD has hit the streets. Both camps are offering incredible performance and the widest array of features ever before seen in graphics cards. But, inevitably, each side brings its own unique strengths and weaknesses. What better way to determine the performance champ than by letting this season’s new crop of cards duke it out in the various price categories? On one side is AMD, the self-proclaimed master of efficiency, looking to hold onto the glory it grabbed when it shipped the original Radeon HD 5870—a surprise contender that knocked former champ Nvidia to the canvas at the time by offering DirectX 11 feature sets at impressive performance levels without requiring a nuclear reactor to power it. On the other side is Nvidia, looking to score a ...

Review: MSI GeForce GTX 470 Twin Frozr II

By TechRadar, published 02-11-2011

As with every generation of cards, the flagship sets sail before the hanky-waving crowds, and the slimmed down versions with slightly less capable GPUs follow in their wake. The GTX 470 came hot on the heels of the GTX 480, and with only marginally reduced architecture. It first launched at £290, in what seemed like a direct attack on AMD's excellent HD 5870. That's proper, high-end, enthusiast pricing, and you'd expect pretty hefty performance for that kind of outlay. But price cuts happen, and never more explosively than with the GTX 470. While you can plump for enhanced, 1.5GB versions with higher clockspeeds, this overclocked model from MSI offers sterling performance for just a shade over £200. Incredible! To put things into perspective, that's almost a ton cheaper than its May laun...