General Gaming Article

General Gaming Article


TP-Link's New Wireless AC Router Does 1733Mbps

Posted: 08 Oct 2015 04:45 PM PDT

TP-Link Archer C2600

Consumers looking for the latest Wireless AC router that can handle multiple devices without a drop in wireless quality may want to check out TP-Link's new Archer C2600. This new networking device boasts 4-stream and multi-user MIMO technologies that optimizes speed and connection performance. This router also offers one of the fastest speeds on the market, providing up to 1733Mbps on the 5GHz band.

"The Archer C2600 is an extremely powerful router with an elegant, streamlined design," said Lewis Wu, executive vice president of TP-LINK USA. "Coupled with multi-user MIMO and 4-Stream technology, the Archer C2600 is designed to handle the increasing bandwidth demands of today's modern homes that are filled with multiple users' different devices that are all accessing the network simultaneously."

According to the company, many routers on the market send data to one device at a time. However, with MU-MIMO technology, the router can "serve" several devices simultaneously, meaning your devices won't have to wait in line to send and receive data. This technology is backed by a dual-core processor clocked at 1.4GHz that can support multiple users. Ultimately you get better streaming and gaming thanks to this new router.

In addition to the 1733Mbps speeds on the 5GHz band, the Archer C2600 provides speeds of up to 800Mbps on the 2.4GHz band, significantly higher than many Wireless AC routers on the market today. These speeds are complimented by four gigabit LAN ports, a gigabit WAN port and two USB 3.0 ports, which can be used to share a printer or external drive.

"Archer C2600 routers provide faster, more efficient Wi-Fi connectivity for the growing number of smart devices on a network," the company adds. "Four high-performance external antennas and high-powered amplifiers help Archer C2600 routers maximize coverage area and stability within the home, while beamforming technology further improves the Wi-Fi coverage by helping it locate wireless devices to form stronger, more reliable connections, even when mobile devices move from room to room."

Customers eager to get their hands on this networking speed demon can grab it from Newegg for a meaty price of $250. The company says that the router will be made available on TP-Link's store and other offline and online retailers later this month.

MSI GT72 with GTX 980 Gallery

Posted: 08 Oct 2015 03:40 PM PDT

Kingston HyperX Predator NVMe 480GB

Posted: 08 Oct 2015 02:38 PM PDT

At a Glance

(+) Great Find: Faster than SATA; high endurance; HHHL adapter for older systems.

(-) NeVer Mind-e: Not as fast as other NVMe offerings; expensive; short warranty; requires NVMe BIOS support to use as a boot drive.

Fly Like an Eagle

With all the hullabaloo about M.2 PCIe NVMe SSDs, users of older systems might feel left out. Enter the Kingston HyperX Predator, with an optional half-height, half-length (HHHL) adapter card that allows anyone with a spare PCI Express slot to use an M.2 drive. There's nothing revolutionary about the adapter card, as it just converts up to four Gen3 PCIe lanes into an M.2 connector, but it opens the M.2 doors to virtually any recent desktop.

The catch is that you won't be able to use an NVMe SSD as your OS/boot drive unless your motherboard BIOS supports NVMe—it will still work in Windows as a secondary drive, but potentially you'd have a slower SATA SSD as the OS drive. Another interesting problem came up in testing the Predator that's worth passing along; Alex found that Windows 10 wouldn't actually finish the upgrade process on an NVMe drive, or at least not on the Predator. A clean install of Windows 10 worked, but if you're running Windows 7 or 8.1 and want to upgrade, last we checked it was a no-go with NVMe. Hopefully Microsoft addresses (or has already addressed?) the problem with a patch.

Kingston HyperX Predator NVMe Specifications
Interface M.2 PCIe x4 Gen3
Form Factor M.2 2280
Optional HHHL PCIx x4 adapter
Capacity 480GB 240GB
Controller Marvell 88SS9293
Memory Type Toshiba A19 Toggle NAND
Max Transfer Read/Write 1100/910 MB/s 1290/600 MB/s
Max IOPS Read/Write 130,000/118,000 160,000/119,000
Endurance 882TB / 1.7 DWPD 415TB / 1.6 DWPD
Power Use 1.38W Idle, 1.4W Avg., 1.99W/8.25W Max Read/Write
Warranty Three years / 882TB Three years / 415TB
Pricing $440 without adapter $205 with adapter

Checking out the specifications, one impressive statistic on the Predator is the endurance rating. Kingston specs the 480GB model we're testing at a whopping 882TB total bytes written, which equates to 1.7 drive writes per day (DWPD). Even the heaviest of home users is unlikely to be writing 800GB of data on a daily basis, so it's highly unlikely anyone will be burning through all the NAND cycles. We have to temper the high endurance rating with a less impressive three year warranty, however; many other SSDs carry a five year warranty—not that the warranty will do you any good if your drive fails and you lose data, so make sure you keep a good backup strategy in place!

The remaining specifications are decent but nowhere near class leading. Of note is the high power use, which may make the Predator less than ideal for notebooks even if they have the requisite M.2 PCIe slot. The IPOS ratings look promising, though it's interesting that the smaller 240GB drive sports higher values, indicating perhaps that the Marvell controller isn't tuned for larger drive sizes. Finally, the maximum throughput is only about twice that of a good SATA drive, and clearly behind the current market leaders (Intel SSD 750 and Samsung SM951 NVMe).

Where things really get dicey is the pricing. The Predator initially launched with MSRP well above $1 per GB ($746/$364 for the 480GB/240GB drives, not including the adapter card), but that was thanks to its early-adopter M.2 NVMe status. With more competition available, prices have dropped to under $1 per GB now, and interestingly you can actually get the 240GB drive with the adapter for less than the price of the 240GB M.2 card alone. The problem is that Samsung's SM951 NVMe sports much faster specs, and while the 256GB model is more expensive than the 240GB Predator, the 512GB model costs substantially less than the 480GB Kingston drive—and you get 32GB of additional storage capacity as an added bonus.

Take this Broken Wing

As noted in our revamped SSD test suite article, we've updated to a new test bed for storage, running a Skylake processor in a Z170 motherboard. Here are the details of our test system, followed by the benchmarks.

Maximum PC 2015 SSD Test Bed
Platform LGA1151
CPU Intel Core i7-6700K (4–4.2GHz)
Mobo ASUS Z170-A
GPU Intel HD Graphics 530
SSDs Intel SSD 750 1.2TB PCIe x4Samsung 850 Pro 1TB SATASamsung 850 EVO 250GB SATA 2x in RAID0Samsung SM951 NVMe 256GB M.2
PSU be quiet! Dark Power Pro 11 850W
Memory G.Skill Ripjaws V 2x8GB DDR4-3000
Cooler be quiet! Dark Rock 3
Case be quiet! Silent Base 800

With the SATA bottleneck out of the picture, M.2 SSDs can stretch their wings and fly… at least to the limit of their abilities. This is where the Predator runs into problems, ultimately falling prey to the substantially faster NVMe drives. While the Predator numbers look good compared to any SATA drive, it falls far short of the Intel SSD 750 and the Samsung SM951 NVMe.

We measured 109K 4K read IOPS, which is close to Kingston's rated throughput, but only 60K write IOPS—well off the 118K rated value. In general, the Predator ends up delivering roughly half the maximum performance of the SM951 and SSD 750, which really hurts when coupled with the lower price point of the 512GB SM951.

Another comparison point is the two Samsung 850 EVO 250GB SATA SSDs in RAID 0. These run neck and neck with the single Predator, often beating it in random IO workloads. The mixed random IOmeter results are particularly bad, with the Predator falling well behind even single SATA SSDs. In our real-world file copy test, it still manages to claim a third place finish, and PCMark 8 illustrates yet again that for everyday tasks there's only so far a fast SSD can take you. But if you're paying top dollar for an NVMe drive, chances are you'd also want a top performing SSD.

Learn to Fly Again

This just goes to show that using the latest buzzwords as a basis for your next buying decision can often lead to disappointment. The Predator has actually been out for a while now, and it was one of the first M.2 NVMe SSDs to hit the market. Unfortunately, while it's generally faster than any individual SATA drive, the Predator falls well short of the potential that M.2 NVMe offers. The Intel SSD 750 and Samsung SM951 NVMe easily surpass the performance of the Predator, and they do so without carrying a substantial price premium.

With the Samsung 950 Pro set to launch next week at even lower prices than the SM951, the writing is on the wall: Kingston needs to cut prices on this drive to keep it relevant. That's the good news, though: With the only real difference between the Predator and other SSDs coming in the form of the controller and interface—items which shouldn't dramatically affect the cost of producing the drive—there should be plenty of room to lower the price. We're giving the Predator a 65 based on the performance and current pricing, but if it should drop to just above SATA price levels—say, $0.50 per GB—we would be less critical.

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Newegg Daily Deals: Asus Intel Core-i5 Desktop, HP Intel Core-i3 Laptop, and More!

Posted: 08 Oct 2015 12:34 PM PDT

Asus Desktop

Top Deal:

You don't need to wait for the influx of official Steam Machines to enjoy PC gaming in your living room. There are several existing console-sized PCs just itching to take residence in your living room, including today's top deal for an Asus Destkop Computer with an Intel Core i5-5200U CPU for $600 with $7 shipping (normally $800). This thing also rocks 8GB of DDR3-1600 RAM, 1TB HDD, GeForce GTX 960M graphics, and Windows 8.1 (upgradeable to Windows 10 for free).

Other Deals:

SuperCombo Storage Pack: 3X HGST Touro Mobile 1TB USB 3.0 2.5-inch Portable Hard Drive for $120 with free shipping (normally $165)

HP Laptop 250 G4 Intel Core i3 (1.7 GHz) 4 GB Memory 500 GB HDD Intel HD Graphics 4400 15.6-inch Windows 7 for $340 with free shipping (normally $410)

Sceptre 20-inch 5ms LED Backlight LCD Monitor 180 cd/m2 DCR 5,000,000:1 (1000:1) Built-in Speakers for $80 with free shipping (normally $86)

Corsair 760W 80 Plus Platinum Power Supply for $130 with free shipping (normally $150 - use coupon code: [EMCKAAT42]; additional $30 Mail-in rebate)

Razer Redesigns BlackWidow Ultimate Mechanical Keyboard, Extends Warranty

Posted: 08 Oct 2015 10:54 AM PDT

A flashy keyboard

Razer BlackWidow 2016

Razer on Thursday announced a new mechanical keyboard, the BlackWidow Ultimate 2016. At a glance, it looks similar to last year's model, though Razer says it's been redesigned from the ground up with an all-new set of features.

Chief among them is fancy per-key backlighting. Each green glowing key has its own LED and can be individually customized through Razer's Synapse software to display a range of fun and funky lighting effects. It comes with several presets, including Wave, Ripple, Reactive, Starlight, and others.

Here's a look at some of them in action:

Razer also made improvements to the smudge-free top cover, combined the audio and microphone jacks, added a USB pass-through port for easy cable management, and installed an enhanced indicator panel on the top-right corner of the keyboard. Finally, the 2016 model boasts a smaller footprint than last year's version.

"There isn't a gaming keyboard out there that offers better value," says Min-Liang Tan, Razer co-founder and CEO. "From the customizable backlit keys to the fact that our Razer Mechanical Switches are the only ones designed especially for gaming, the Razer BlackWidow Ultimate 2016 is the perfect keyboard for any gamer looking to upgrade to mechanical keyboards."

What remains unchanged are Razer's custom mechanical switches. They're "Razer Green" switches that are somewhat similar to Cherry MX Blues. Razer says they're built specifically for gaming with an actuation point of 1.9mm. You can read more about them here.

Razer says that starting with this new model, all keyboards featuring Razer Mechanical Switches will have an extended warranty of two years.

The new plank is available now for $110.

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Vizio's 120-Inch Reference Series 4K TV Will Only Set You Back $130,000

Posted: 08 Oct 2015 10:07 AM PDT

You won't find this in Walmart

Vizio Reference TV

Vizio announced pricing for its new Reference Series televisions with Dolby Vision, and yes, they're expensive. Crazy expensive, even -- Vizio's aksing $6,000 for the 65-inch model and a jaw-dropping $130,000 for the 120-inch version.

No, our zero-key isn't sticking, Vizio's price tag of more than a $1,000 per inch of screen real estate is correct. And the craziest thing isn't the price alone, but that somebody out there is going to buy this thing. Probably multiple somebodies.

More power to them. What they'll get in return is a cutting edge television with a 4K resolution and the first to support Dolby Vision, a proprietary High Dynamic Range (HDR) imaging playback technology that's supposed to splash your eyeballs with incredible colors, contrast, and brightness.

"Vizio and Dolby have worked tirelessly together to make true High Dynamic Range a reality for consumers. The picture quality achieved with Dolby Vision on the Vizio Reference Series is literally jaw-dropping and establishes a new level of excellence for the industry," said Matt McRae, Chief Technology Officer, Vizio. "High Dynamic Range and Ultra Color Spectrum is enabled through proprietary, custom panel technologies creating a television that pushes the limits of contrast ratios and color gamut while redefining the level of picture quality available at home."

Yes, a $130,000 4K TV falls a bit outside of Maximum PC's usual coverage, but with Steam Machines and other PC consoles invading the living room and the monitor market innovating again (remember when a 30-inch 2560x1600 monitor was the best there was?), we couldn't pass up an opportunity to talk about Vizio's Reference Series.

It will also be interesting to see if Vizio or any other company brings this kind of technology to the computer monitor space. What's unique about these TVs is their ability to render colors closer to the range a human eye can see. Vizio says the effect is further enhanced by a full array 800-nit LED backlight with an unprecedented 348 active LED zones for a much wider range of luminance and precise color control.

Netflix is on board with what Vizio has done here and has committed to remastering content in Dolby Vision, starting with season one of Marco Polo.

Both the 65-inch and 120-inch models are special order items on Vizio's website. If you have the requisite funds and are interested, you'll have to fill out a form indicating interest.

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Fast Forward: Are We Living in Sim City?

Posted: 08 Oct 2015 12:00 AM PDT

This article was published in the November 2015 issue of Maximum PC. For more trusted reviews and feature stories, subscribe here.

Is our universe an immense computer simulation? Is everything we perceive an illusion rendered in super-resolution pixels? Are we mere pixels, too? Lately, I've seen these questions debated more often in Internet forums, and often by reputable scientists. It's not just another crackpot conspiracy theory.

Usually, I'm far too busy to waste attention on trending Internet debates, which can seem as pointless as medieval arguments over the number of angels that could fit on the head of a pin. But the "universe simulation hypothesis" intersects my knowledge of computers. And one thing often missing from the debate is a realistic forecast of future computing power.

Many (though not all) simulation proponents assume, essentially, that Moore's Law is forever. They take for granted that computers will keep getting more powerful on a steep curve and will eventually be capable of simulating a universe as complex as ours appears to be. Whoa, I say.

MPC117.qs halfhill.simcitysocia

The view from Maximum PC's window is definitely real.

In past columns, I've described the fallacies that sprout like weeds around Moore's Law. To recap, Moore's Law is not a scientific law; it's an astute observation of semiconductor progress that was first made in 1965 and modified in 1975.

I've charted its course using all three common variations (doubling component density every 12 months, 18 months, or 24 months). Analyzing it by any measure, we're already falling behind the predicted curve.

Similar curves are common in science. It took only 44 years for airplanes to advance from the Wright brother's wood-and-canvas contraption to the first supersonic flight. At that rate, airliners should be hypersonic by now, but the curve has flattened since the 1960s.

Yes, future breakthroughs (carbon nanotubes, quantum computing, whatever) could breathe new life into Moore's Law, or even surpass it. Computers will keep getting more powerful for a long time. However, that doesn't guarantee they will eventually grow powerful enough to simulate our entire universe.

Consider that to simulate a single atom in all its marvelous complexity requires simulating its subatomic particles (such as protons, electrons, neutrons) and the even-smaller quarks within them. Simulating a particle requires computer memory to store its properties, plus computing elements (such as transistors) to express its behavior and its interactions with other particles.

Even tiny amounts of matter would demand enormous computer resources. To simulate an entire universe on this scale would require a computer that's larger and more complex than the simulation.

Therefore, I reject a fully detailed simulated universe. However, we could be living in a partial simulation. Just as today's computer games simulate only one or a few main characters in some detail and fake the rest, it's possible our universe works the same way. Maybe the simulation creates a local instance of subatomic-level detail only when a scientist peers through an electron microscope or operates a particle accelerator.

Or maybe, only one person is a fully detailed simulation for which everything else is either faked or created on the fly. A fully simulated Paris wouldn't exist until this person goes there, and it's faked again when they leave. Maybe that person is me. Maybe it's you. But if our universe is as vast and complex as it appears, the physical limits on computer power tell me it must be real.


Tom Halfhill was formerly a senior editor for Byte magazine and is now an analyst for Microprocessor Report.

MMORPG News

MMORPG News


Battlecry: 'We Have Concerns About the Game' says Bethesda

Posted: 08 Oct 2015 07:43 AM PDT

In a short statement to the ProgressBar.com.au site, Bethesda has expressed its concern about the upcoming team death match game, Battlecry. ProgressBar reached out to Bethesda after noting the game conspicuous absence from the most recent conventions.

Albion Online: Sold to the Man in Red! Land Auctions Make Way into Game

Posted: 08 Oct 2015 07:33 AM PDT

Sold to the Man in Red! Land Auctions Make Way into Game

The Albion Online site has been updated with a new article to detail the latest feature addition to the closed beta: Land Auctions. With this system, players will be able to generate a robust economy through the buying and selling of available lands throughout the game world via auction.

Runescape: Runefest a Big Success, Highlights Revealed

Posted: 08 Oct 2015 07:30 AM PDT

Runefest a Big Success, Highlights Revealed

Jagex has announced that this year's RuneFest was a resounding success with thousands of RuneScape fans in attendance. During the convention, new information was revealed including a new RuneScape questline written by the games founders, Paul & Andrew Gower; new content is incoming for Old School; and the first closed beta for the TCG tie-in, Chronicle: RuneScape Legends, will be coming soon.

World of Tanks: Lindo Maravilhoso! Brazilian Bulldog Rolls Onto Consoles

Posted: 08 Oct 2015 07:24 AM PDT

Lindo Maravilhoso! Brazilian Bulldog Rolls Onto Consoles

The first Brazilian tank, the M41B Bulldog, is ready to roll into World of Tanks (XBox One & XBox) during a limited release in celebration of the Brazil Game Show. The Bulldog is a Tier VIII tank and will be offered globally from today through October 23rd.

Star Citizen: Death of a Salesman

Posted: 07 Oct 2015 11:25 AM PDT

Death of a Salesman

The drama surrounding Star Citizen continues and spins even more wildly as cease and desist letters fly. Red Thomas breaks a long hiatus from writing about the game to chime in.

EverQuest II: Time-Locked Servers to Expand on October 8th

Posted: 06 Oct 2015 07:12 PM PDT

Time-Locked Servers to Expand on October 8th

Everquest II servers, Stormhold and Deathtoll, will have more content to explore on October 8th when the Desert of Flames expansion unlocks. Players on the time-locked expansion servers voted to bring the expansion content to bear.

DC Universe Online: Episode 17 Promises a Lot of Flash

Posted: 07 Oct 2015 10:00 AM PDT

Episode 17 Promises a Lot of Flash

Jesse Benjamin Design Director & SJ Mueller Associate Creative Director were on hand late yesterday afternoon to talk about today's DC Universe Online Episode 17 - Flash Legends. The third in a series of meaty monthly updates, Flash Legends will be available for free later today for Members with a general release to the Marketplace set for October 14th.

Hearthstone: Heroes of Warcraft: Hearthstone's Not-So-Grand Tournament

Posted: 06 Oct 2015 11:50 PM PDT

Hearthstone

It's been over a month since Hearthstone's latest expansion, The Grand Tournament, was released. I think it's safe to say the dust has settled enough at this point to be able to judge the expansion's impact on the game. Unfortunately, Hearthstone's Grand Tournament has been anything but grand for a massive 132 card expansion.

Camelot Unchained: Get Some Class

Posted: 05 Oct 2015 06:02 PM PDT

Get Some Class

After 887 words that had nothing to do with anything I realized I had once again drifted too far off course! As tempted as I was to send in a bunch of unrelated short rants about blenders and Cthulhu just to test the fine editors of MMORPG.com, I clicked the trash icon and started over.

Rift: Into the Wilds Launches with Trailer & Gifts

Posted: 07 Oct 2015 10:42 AM PDT

Into the Wilds Launches with Trailer & Gifts

Trion Worlds has announced that the latest Rift update, Into the Wilds, is ready to launch today. To celebrate the update that includes the new Primalist and an all-new location to explore, the team has sent out a trailer and revealed some nice gifts for players.

Sword Coast Legends: Monster Journals - The Duergar and the Drow

Posted: 07 Oct 2015 09:30 AM PDT

Monster Journals - The Duergar and the Drow

Sword Coast Legends, due out at the end of this month, sports a lot of the creatures from Dungeons and Dragons' illustrious history. But, unlike most RPGs, you can actually play as these monsters should you decide to take on the role of Dungeon Master, in our third of a series today we're pulling back the veil on the Duergar and the Drow... two races you'll face deep in the Underdark of the Sword Coast.

General: Aftermath "Ask Me Anything" with Adam Skidmore - TONIGHT!

Posted: 07 Oct 2015 10:29 AM PDT

Aftermath "Ask Me Anything" with Adam Skidmore - TONIGHT!

Join us tonight at 7PM ET in The Pub for an "Ask Me Anything" Q&A with Romero's Aftermath's Adam Skidmore.

Skyforge: Distortions - 10 Player Elite Battles Detailed

Posted: 07 Oct 2015 09:28 AM PDT

Distortions - 10 Player Elite Battles Detailed

The latest video to come out of Obsidian Entertainment, the Allods Team and My.com features a look at Distortions, 10-player elite battles against ancient battle-hardened invaders. To access a Distortion, Pantheons will need to gain access to a Distortion Analyzer to summon and defeat a beast from the Storan Temple. Check out the video to see just how these epic battles go down.

Fallout 4: If I Only Had a Brain - New S.P.E.C.I.A.L. on Intelligence

Posted: 07 Oct 2015 09:04 AM PDT

If I Only Had a Brain - New S.P.E.C.I.A.L. on Intelligence

The fifth in a series of Fallout 4 videos has arrived that will give players the lowdown on Intelligence, that attribute that makes anyone a wunderkind. This latest video follows the earlier ones on Strength, Endurance, Perception and Charisma. Check it out!

Gloria Victis: Build Up Your Nation's Power!

Posted: 05 Oct 2015 06:09 PM PDT

Build Up Your Nation

Gloria Victis offers various ways to make a living: earning the reputation as an undefeated duelist or a famous crafting master, being an experienced warrior fighting in countless battles or a trader who always have something precious in store. But whichever path you choose, your life will be concentrated around various settlements. Let's take a look at the structures building and development system, implemented in the latest Gloria Victis update.

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