Hi. I would like to buy an 27" IMAC but of course I am concerning about gaming The Imac comes with a high resolution IPS panel( 2560 by 1440 pixels ) and a ATI 5750 vga. The other specs are I7 2,93 Ghz 8 GB RAM 1333 and 1 T hard Drive Ok Guys. Before you trow stones on me ( I dont even know if there is such expression in english:nerd I know this card is not able to handle such a high resolution with everything maxed out. My questions are: 1- What resolution will I be able to play with a decent frame rate using a 5750? I like to play FPS games mostly 2- Do you think it is a good upgrade considering my current pc? :bang: By the way it is possible to run windows 7 natively on a MAC. I am sure about that Thanks a lot for your help
I think the best question to ask is...Why a mac? I'm not asking to keep you from buying it because I'm a PC guy...just to make sure that you're buying one for the right reason. Cause gaming isn't the right reason.
Bootcamp can install windows 7. 5750 is about as fast as my 9800, I play my games at 1600x1200 which is my monitors highest resolution with no issue.
Yeap. I kwow. I just would like to have an "all included" computer with a big good IPS screen. That's the reason. But if I cant play games with a decent frame rate I definetely will not buy it
Then just buy the big, good, screen. You don't have to go all in on a Mac for an awesome screen. The monitor's resolution is just too huge. And if you start playing at non-native resolutions, its gonna look like crap, so what's the point of having a nice monitor? Just get a PC with a decent video card, and get an awesome monitor. Unless you're planning on doing something you're not telling me.
Buy big monitor and good PC. Then if you want to have Mac, but dont need high-end hardware to do what you want, buy used Core2Duo 13" MacBook and connect it to that monitor.
Well, yes there's something else. In my country the IMAC 27" costs U$ 4000.00 and since I am travelling to America shortly I would be able to buy it for U$ 2.000.00. So it makes me wondering . . .:3eyes:
I just checked Apple's site, the configuration you listed costs $2.4K USD. - The monitor is good - An i7 870 is good (assuming it's not from a crap batch) - The RAM is el-cheapo garbage... "1333MHz" = 166MHz - The video card is LULZ, calling it anything aside from bottom of the barrel would be a lie. Maybe it's good for 1280x720 in modern games... - They don't say what the 1TB drive is, probably the cheapest OEM specific trash they can get Most importantly the motherboard is no doubt some OEM trash from Foxconn which will give you no options, you won't be able to OC squat. A 5750 on that monitor? No we will not throw stones at you, we will throw large boulders. Go ahead and spend $2.4K before whatever the taxes are on that crap, it's your choice whether or not you want to be stupid.
1. Buy an iMac in America 2. Return to Brazil 3. Resell the iMac 4. Make a profit of $2000 USD Anyways, to answer your original question, the HD 5750 will have trouble playing most system-intensive games at native resolution. Expect to run Crysis at medium-low settings at 2560x1440 in order to stabilize the frame rate. Other games should run much better, but you'll be hard-pressed to do much better than medium with some high settings for anything moderately intensive. Drop in a new GPU (i.e. GTX 460) and experience a huge increase in performance. If you can find a Core 2 Quad for a decent price, go get it. A new motherboard would be nice, but not necessary for you to run the new components.
if youre willing to spend 2k US... you could build a superior PC for a lot cheaper, dual boot windows 7 and hackintosh and with the left over money buy a panasonic IPS panel TV. im running the panasonic thl37g10a 37inch ips panel tv and its pretty darn good.
If you are buying for gaming reason than you shouldn't because Macs don't have that many games and if you can't build a PC by yourself than go to cyberpowerpc.com, best place to buy a gaming pc.
37 inch! !UAU!! What kind of gpu do you need for such a huge monitor ? I mean Whats its native resolution?
You can indeed game on a Mac, but not really too recommended if your main prerogative is gaming. Macs are better for multimedia work or basic office work as well. If you're mainly playing games, just build a PC. I have a Macbook and it's great for running my computer security suite and etc. (MacOS X is a UNIX variant so it can run 'em) along with BackTrack Linux which I have on my USB key. I run Counterstrike, Portal, Starcraft, Starcraft II, Sims 3 and Team Fortress II on my Mac when on the go. deltatux