• Granixo
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    1 year ago

    Aside from failing to convince me, they have deepened my own conviction that sound cards are essential to maintaining decent framerates.

      • Granixo
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        1 year ago

        Creative’s dedicated sound cards still make a difference when PCs struggle to sustain 30FPSon certain games, (and can help getting a stable 60FPS) on poorly optimized titles (or games that have been plagued by Denuvo).

        • xan1242@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Are you serious?

          Now you got me wondering why this is the case…

          I wonder if it’s just the drivers. Or something else, like the audio device name, or APOs.

          Which game in particular did you have in mind?

          • Granixo
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            1 year ago

            I suspect it mainly has to do with the fact that Windows usually outputs uncompressed audio (due to requiring extra licencing for codecs like Dolby on a general-purpose PC, unlike consoles).

            Because of that, a dedicated sound card will take that weight off the CPU.

            In my case in particular, i noticed an 5-8FPS increase when playing AC:Revelations with my dedicated sound card (bear in mind, my CPU is merely a Core 2 Duo), but that’s because i still don’t have the money to upgrade my whole rig.

            Back on topic, i saw a video by Anton’s Hardware that made a deep research on the topic, and while the conclusion was that, yes, on current games & hardware it didin’t make up much of a difference, it could be useful for specific cases, (in some poorly optimized games you can get better frames, and in well-optimized games can push FPS a bit further.

            To finally end my comment, i’ll add a link to the video i just mentioned, along with one of the comments that i think demonstrates a “best case scenario” for the use of a sound card in current gaming.

            https://youtu.be/aFy9jZzDSnY

            • xan1242@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              This is an interesting watch.

              Thanks for sharing!

              I used to use sound cards myself ages ago for MIDI and DirectSound acceleration. I didn’t expect the hardware audio codecs to actually make a difference.

              Nothing is stopping me from installing a PCIe Sound Blaster with a good old EMU chip. At least I hope so, the EMU10k1 and 20k1 have a hardware DMA bug which breaks them on systems with more than 2GB of memory lol

              Not sure if I should go the CMedia route and just use Xonar instead. I do like Creative’s features (especially ALchemy), but those you can gain on any machine using a software suite made by Creative themselves.

              • Granixo
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                1 year ago

                As the video i linked demonstrates, Asus cards are slower than Creative cards, so i recommend Creative.

                That being said, choose whatever you feel comfortable with. :)

          • Granixo
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            1 year ago

            You got me there pal.

            I mean i don’t remember having audio driver issues last time i used Ubuntu on my desktop PC (i think at the time i had an Audigy SE, now i have an X-Fi XtremeGamer).

            You got me curious, i’ll try it as soon as i can and i’ll tell you back the results.