![]() ![]() Technically GTX TItan-X Maxwell supports Xp, if you add the card to the ini file it will be detected and should work Reply 105 of 232, by agent_x007 plus my 2500K system is a pain in the ass and would have to be completely disassembled and motherboard removed to fit a second card, so would like to know if it works some how before "going down that road". I don't really want to spend another $200 on a whim in case it doesn't work. If we're chasing down the absoultely fastest possible graphics setup for XP, then this might be useful info. ![]() I've heard someone rumored that it should be possible, but I haven't heard of anyone actually doing it. I would like to know if anyone's been able to enable SLI With nvidia 700 series under XP-32 and has it working. Supposedly these GTX 780 Classified cards (mine came at 86% ASIC quality) can do 1500 mhz core on a water loop, but I can't find a water block for it yet. The only point of reference is some random website reviews that ran other cards like the 780 Ti and titan black and 970's through 3dmark 2006 and found my 780 in this system slots in between the 970 and 980 cards. And I picked up one off ebay for $180 and got it here and tuned it's bios myself and have it clocked at 1268 core and 1900 mhz (7600 effective) memory and mated it with my Z77 gigabyte board and a i5-2500K 5.1 ghz and it's now my system that dual boots XP and Vista64. Then I found out that EVGA hand-binned all of the GTX 780 classified cards to at least 80% or higher ASIC Quality and they all overclock to the moon with a tuned bios. At first I figured it was the nvidia 700 series. It was released to extremely mixed reviews–its MobyGames ratings, range from 92 to 20–and gamers weren’t too willing to forgive its flaws, considering how strongly it’d been hyped and how potentially awesome it should have been, coming from two of Britain’s greatest humorists.I guess it's time to comment I did come up with the fastest XP video card. Now, put all of these “features” into a game that took two years to make, was hyped to hell and back, and was, at the time, one of the most expensive games ever made, and you’ve got Starship Titanic. That, or plan on ripping out half your hair because you didn’t know that a robotic parrot enjoys eating brazil nuts instead of walnuts. If you ever plan on trying Starship Titanic out, then, for the love of God, use a strategy guide. ![]() It literally got so bad that later versions of the game came with a 120 page walkthrough, packaged completely free of charge. Yeah, there were a couple of clever dialogue exchanges programmed in–most notably, you could ask several of the robots about the Spice Girls and start a three-minute conversation–but for the most part, the entire conversation system was broken.Īdditionally, Starship Titanic remains one of the most absurdly difficult adventure games ever made: the puzzles often seem designed to be funny, rather than challenging, and as a result their solutions range anywhere from obscure to downright ridiculous. This means that your enjoyment of the game relies entirely on the gameplay, which ain’t exactly the greatest thing in the world.ĭespite how intensely hyped the game’s conversation system was, it really boiled down to typing in keywords that the parser would recognize, which usually resulted in a robot giving you an extremely cryptic hint. The game gives you a goal at the very beginning, and you spend the rest of the entire game trying to accomplish that goal, and that goal alone. There are no plot developments, no storyline, and no characters apart from the humanoid robots on whom you constantly rely for hints. The entire game consists of running around the ship, collecting computer parts and solving puzzles so you can reassemble the AI that controls the ship. While Starship Titanic is pretty goddamned hard (more on that later), it is not, by any means, deep. ![]()
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