Wile E. Posted February 22, 2022 Posted February 22, 2022 I'm getting a new notebook soon with hardware that's better than my gaming desktop in some metrics (CPU, SSD speed, RAM speed), but slightly inferior in others (GPU). If it could provide better DCS performance, I'd consider dual booting it, rather than wiping out the windows install entirely. Short of installing DCS and the VR environment, and playing the game, is there a good way to judge the hardware performance?
winghunter Posted February 22, 2022 Posted February 22, 2022 Play the same track on both systems and let fpsVR collect the data 1 DCS Web Editor - New 3D Mission Editor for DCS that runs in your browser DCS Web Viewer free browser based mission planner 4090 RTX, 13700KF, water cooled, Quest 3
Wile E. Posted February 22, 2022 Author Posted February 22, 2022 Does fpsVR work with the non-steam version of DCS?
Svsmokey Posted February 22, 2022 Posted February 22, 2022 Yes 9700k @ stock , Aorus Pro Z390 wifi , 32gb 3200 mhz CL16 , 1tb EVO 970 , MSI RX 6800XT Gaming X TRIO , Seasonic Prime 850w Gold , Coolermaster H500m , Noctua NH-D15S , CH Pro throttle and T50CM2/WarBrD base on Foxxmounts , CH pedals , Reverb G2v2
Wile E. Posted February 23, 2022 Author Posted February 23, 2022 I tried out fpsVR in a Warthog started mid flight. FPS: 21 Average: 22.8 GPU Frametime: 48.0ms GPU: 77C (after two minutes of rendering), 99% GPU mem: 7.8/8.0GB At 2680x2680 per eye. My CPU was only at 46C and 14%, and my RAM utilization was 15.5/15.9GB. So it looks like it's time to sell a kidney and buy a 3090.
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