LaorinAnd to whoever said that being on the PC would be great because of 5.1 support, guess what! GT4 already supports 5.1 and I've got my speaker set up to both my computer and the PS2.
lol thats nuthing compared to mine.124 ram 6 gb hard drive cpuspeed is 350 and it has no graphic card-thats outdated.eastleyMate that is a ancient PC. Way out dated. Even my PC is out dated and its alot better than your PC.
mbavaria30sactually consoles are much more effecient at gaming than computers, simply because there is no variables interms of equipment before output. there is always the same hardware, therefor things can be written more effeciently and use hardware better. No pc game is going to be able to written to run as effeciently and therefor look better and run fast and all these things we enjoy when compared to a dedicated gaming setup like a console. When you get down to it, the ps2 is a 5 year old machine that was created with hardware that was, at a stand alone computer level, very medium.
Geeky1The Emotion Engine in the PS2 is very powerful, yes; I've seen performance pegged at 6.6GFLOPs, which is very impressive, and faster than a 2.4GHz Sempron 3100+ according to SiSoft Sandra's arithmetic CPU benchmark. But the PS2 doesn't have the graphics power of even a midrange, ~$150 US graphics accelerator. And while the CPU will help make up for some of that, it won't make it up entirely.
Also, I'm fairly sure that the PS2's graphics accelerator is not capable of the kind of visual effects that DX9-class GPUs are.
Ultimately, while the Emotion Engine in the PS2 is very, very fast, the performance of the whole package will NEVER match a high end or even a midrange PC. The PS2 only has 32MB of RAM guys- and that's used for both the graphics and the AI and physics calculations. Any halfway decent PC today has at least 1GB of system RAM, plus at least 64MB of graphics memory. And windows and program overhead doesn't use enough RAM to make up for the fact that the PC has 32x more RAM; a fresh boot of Windows XP with AVG Anti-Virus only uses ~128MB... leaving 768 for a game. Versus 32mb of shared RAM.
If you think the PS2 is capable of playing a graphically intensive game at the same kind of resolution and image quality as even a halfway decent PC can do it at, and capable of it at a playable frame rate (30+) you're fooling yourself.
The PS2 is something like 5 years old. And it has a msrp of $150. While the Emotion Engine is very fast, the platform as a whole is way out of its league in a comparison with a decent PC.
jia_zhuangall i like to say is that too many people here think they know what they are talking about...![]()
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Geeky1...or am I the only one?
I've got a PS2 (obviously); I've also got an Xbox. But I also have 9 PCs and a Mac, at least 4 of which have significantly more CPU power and graphics power than any console on the market (the PS3 might be able to give one or more of them a run for their money but I'm not entirely convinced of that yet).
While the graphics on GT4 aren't bad, coming from HL2 @ 2048x1536 with the detail settings maxed out, with 4x FSAA and 8x AF... it's a little (ok, ok, a lot) disappointing.
My evaluation of GT4 so far is that it's an outstanding game hamstrung by a crappy platform. As far as game consoles go, the PS2 isn't bad (I still think the XBox and GC are better but that's just me), but there's just no way what amounts to a $100-$200 computer can compete with a good, properly built and properly tuned gaming PC.
As I see it, the PC is the ideal platform for GT4:
-More graphics power than a console
-The graphics are not processed by the same processor that does the physics calculations the way I *believe* the PS2 does it, which frees up more resources for both graphics and physics engines
-Graphics would be far better; much higher resolution, much more detailed. HL2-level graphics would not be inconcievable.
-Hard drives are your friend; they reduce loading times compared to optical drives (and the load times for GT4 are annoyingly long...)
-Hard drive based game data storage would also allow for an even larger car and track database; PERSONALLY, I find that while the selection of cars in GT4 is significantly larger than GT3, and the largest of any racing sim ever (afaik), there are a whole bunch of cars that were left out, presumably due to a lack of space on the DVD.
The game itself is great... it'd just be far better as a PC game than a console game. Does anyone else agree with me on that, or am I on my own on this one?