The system as you have it right now should work fine for playing GTAIII as for the upgrade question I would say that unless you get a real bargain price for a 1ghz proc you should wait to have a little more cash and upgrade to a bigger mobo too.
Join us now to get access to all our awesome features. Once registered and logged in, you will be able to create topics, post replies, give reputation to your fellow members, get your own private messenger, and so, so much more.
I have an ASUS CUSL2-C motherboard with a 750 chip, the max that the board will allow, without overclocking, is 1ghz. I was wondering if anybody thinks the upgrade would be "worth it???"
By "worth it," I mean will the upgrade help me play newer video games; will there be a noticeable difference in speed, etc. . ..
Although I understand that specs are not out, I am really looking forward to Grand Theft Auto: VIce CIty, and am worried that my computer will be too slow to run it.
By the way, I have a ati radeon 64ddr vivo, video card, and I am not someone who preferes to play games at max resoluttion, with all video options maxed out (sometimes I lower the recommended settings because I think the game looks better that way) -- Just added this because I understand there are many factors in determining whether a system will run a particular game.
The system as you have it right now should work fine for playing GTAIII as for the upgrade question I would say that unless you get a real bargain price for a 1ghz proc you should wait to have a little more cash and upgrade to a bigger mobo too.
"No es la fe lo que salva sino el no tenerla (It is not faith what saves but not to have it)"
- Antonio Plaza -
couldnt agree more
They Seek Him Here They Seek Him There They Seek Him Everywhere
Catch_Me_If_You_Can
MY_Regiment__The_Poachers
The configuration is similar in one machine I have: CUSL-2C with 800M PIII which was stressed for quite some time to 1050 Mhz without problems (depends on the CPU, some other badges of PIII may not be o/ce'd at all. But now that the CPU has aged I simply turned the clock back to normal and using it as a dedicated small server machine very stable system, blame it on Asus). I'd rather also say that for your gaming machine you'd better buy a new one.
The revolution cannot be a lever, or an essay, or tablaeu, or embroidery. It cannot proceed mellowly, piece-by-piece, gently, devoutly, simply and humbly.
Mao Zedong
This kind of a speed up isn't necesary, because you almost not see it.
I have for my own a machine that is stressed up to 931 from 700 and i didn't see the speed up i thought so i put it back, because i'm using a AMD processor and it is getting real hot a degree or 65. So i'd rather also say things you already know.
Agree, not worth it to upgrade CPU only. Do entire CPU/mobo combo. IMO, you should at a minimum double CPU speed when you upgrade, otherwise not cost effective. But I'm not a power hog, I won't pay more that ~$100 for a CPU, so I'm always running slower than the leading edge. Also, for gaming, you may get more bang for the buck by upgrading to a kickass video card (not sure what you're running now), that can often be a bottleneck because of intense video demands of 3D games.
Now is a good time for a major upgrade, since memory has dropped so much (in U.S. anyway). I upgraded in Dec, and had to buy new DDR memory because my board was running PC100 sticks, and now the price is half what I paid!