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Pretty sure you have to upgrade your graphic card (I mean add one) but I'm guessing by your monitor resolution and processor model that you are using a notebook, right?So, I'm guessing I have to upgrade my graphics card? or would there be a workaround.
I haven't tried with The Phantom Pain, but Ground Zeroes ran decently on a two-year-old $300 laptop with HD4000 integrated graphics in it. No matter how you optimized it there was some input lag, but the same seems to be true of the 360 version. Last I looked the min and recommended specs were the same for both, but TPP seems like it loads a lot more at once.Keep in mind that a laptop that can run MGS V decently can cost quite a lot.
Huh, I guess that's what I get for my fixation of always running everything maxed out.I haven't tried with The Phantom Pain, but Ground Zeroes ran decently on a two-year-old $300 laptop with HD4000 integrated graphics in it. No matter how you optimized it there was some input lag, but the same seems to be true of the 360 version. Last I looked the min and recommended specs were the same for both, but TPP seems like it loads a lot more at once.
I'd be interested in seeing how well TPP performs on a newer HD5500 ultrabook, but I'm already halfway through the main campaign on the PS3 version, and I don't really have 20-30GB of free space.
Technically he has 4GB of RAM, although it looks like the graphics are authorized to use up to nearly 1.7GB of that.This thread gave me a good chuckle
>>MGSV
>>Intel HD Graphics
>>2GB of ram
I'll readily admit that it worked best with most of the shiny graphics options off and running in a 600p window. Still looked as good as the last-gen version, though.Huh, I guess that's what I get for my fixation of always running everything maxed out.
"If you can't play it on at least High, then you're doing it wrong"