In years prior there were a lot of games and a shifting understanding of what hardware they can require. While gfx needs changed rapidly, hard drive space requirements went up steadily, predictably. As most of us have long abandoned physical media sales and use digital downloads instead, this number has stopped to be defined by the medium’s capacity.

Before and now we had outliers like MMORPGs and movie-like games requiring more estate, while other games like Deep Rock Galactic needing just 4GBs, but there always was some number of gigabytes you as a consumer thought a new game would take.

Where’s that sweet spot now for you?

For me, it’s 60GB, or a 40-80GB range. Something less or more than that causes questions and assumptions. I have a lot of space, but I’d probably decline if some game would exceed 2x of my norm or 120GB of storage.

  • Toes♀@ani.social
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    1 day ago

    Oh interesting, I’ll need to look into that more.

    I’d expect that it’s much better than a 1050. And still probably best in slot at that price point. (For new hardware)

    Perhaps a used 1080ti would be better but I doubt a system with a 1050 has the power supply for that.

    • insomniac_lemon@lemmy.cafe
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      1 day ago

      I doubt a system with a 1050 has the power supply for that

      Remember that was an outlier for the build. PSU is 650w silver. Though it’s currently nice to not need a GPU power cable.

      I’m mostly happy with 1050Ti performance level for what I do. Probably will just stick with it unless I could get used AMD (for better time on Linux), like an 8GiB Polaris card for a moderate uplift. Probably not considering I don’t know anyone and don’t feel like buying used online.