I noticed how the gameplay this week wasn't lagging at all. However, the climbing animations aren't that great right now. However, I know that the climbing animations will improve in the coming months.
However, the heading of my question is a different one:
As the space on my SSD is getting a little bit sparse (and I don’t want to delete games I still enjoy), I have to decide whether to install the game on said SSD or fall back on the additional hard drive.
Does Planet Zoo benefit from a SSD installment? Is there a lot of in-game-loading going on?
Or is the slower hard drive just as fine for an enjoyable gaming experience?
All games benefit from SSD, (sometimes textures can loading while gameplay and you'll feel that stutter if you dont have enough ram or vram). But with all Drives, always leave 20% free space.
16 GB RAM and a GTX 980ti is borderline I'd say, depending on your graphics settings. It's fine for most games, but more lower mid-end for games such as this. Largely depends on the CPU, due to this being a simulation-heavy game.
Technically it's not the same if it's older. It just has the same name.Maybe because Planet Coaster has these issues and is running on the same, although older, engine?
I think you can get away with the RAM, and perhaps even the GPU (a 10 series might be better of course, but as it's a 6GB TI variant I'd say it's still fine), but it really depends on what CPU you have.This is depressing. This is the PC I bought for VR (Elite Dangerous).
But okay, this was three years ago. I will probably have to consider an upgrade.
I don't think its worth them upgrading to DirectX 12 yet. While it would give a slight performance boost, it would not be massive. They've also got to think about their player base. DirectX 12 is only available on Windows 10, so if they were to make Planet Zoo using DirectX 12, it would only be available to Windows 10 users. There are still a large amount of users that have not switched to Windows 10, many still use Windows 7. Obviously they want to get the game in the hands of as many users as possible, so using DirectX 12 would not be a smart move at this point in time.The final version should be more optimized. It would be good if players of all ages didn't have to have a beefed up PC to run this game. Much of the blame could be put towards Directx11. If the game ran on Directx12, it would run more smoother. Nuff said.... Directx12 utilizes more efficiently more than just one of your CPU cores, where as Directx11 only can utilize one CPU core to it's full potential. Intel has helped by releasing the Intel Core i9-9900k CPU, which has a high clock speed of 5Ghz with 8 cores 16 threads. I've played Planet Coaster have even had the game when it was in Alpha. And from my results from Windows 10 Task Manager and MSI Afterburner, I'm seeing one or two of my cores at 70-95% and the rest of my CPU cores at 10-20% utilization, just because it's a Directx11 game. Planet Coaster got a lot of criticism for lag and performance no thanks to Directx11. There has being optimization improvements to PC. But there's only so much improving you can do with Directx11. When Zoo Tycoon came out when I was a kid, you didn't need a beefed up or high end PC to run it. But since Planet Zoo is a "piece by piece" game like Planet Coaster, it will be quite easy to run into lag as players will, and they will.... build a bigger zoo.
I don't think its worth them upgrading to DirectX 12 yet. While it would give a slight performance boost, it would not be massive. They've also got to think about their player base. DirectX 12 is only available on Windows 10, so if they were to make Planet Zoo using DirectX 12, it would only be available to Windows 10 users. There are still a large amount of users that have not switched to Windows 10, many still use Windows 7. Obviously they want to get the game in the hands of as many users as possible, so using DirectX 12 would not be a smart move at this point in time.
Yes, and those AAA games probably have a much larger budget and dev team than Frontier does with Planet Zoo. DirectX 11 in most cases is easier to code with, and if they wanted to add support for DirectX 12, it would require a load more work. And I don't think all the extra work would be worth it, as I said, it wouldn't give a massive performance boost unfortunately.You know many AAA games come with both DX11 and DX12 versions.
I hope they have support for both because I have DX12, I found out, since I have Windows 10. I got my pc last year before I found PZ. Would that mean I can't play what I bought?? OR.. how does that work?Yes, and those AAA games probably have a much larger budget and dev team than Frontier does with Planet Zoo. DirectX 11 in most cases is easier to code with, and if they wanted to add support for DirectX 12, it would require a load more work. And I don't think all the extra work would be worth it, as I said, it wouldn't give a massive performance boost unfortunately.
You also need to make sure you have a GPU that supports dx12.I hope they have support for both because I have DX12, I found out, since I have Windows 10. I got my pc last year before I found PZ. Would that mean I can't play what I bought?? OR..![]()
Okay good. I was worried for a moment.. haha Seems my GPU supports DX12 as well.You also need to make sure you have a GPU that supports dx12.
But dont worry, you can play even if the game is only dx11,
You know many AAA games come with both DX11 and DX12 versions.
Buy an expensive computer, and you should be able to run the game satisfactorily.I'm confused with all this spec talk...
Can someone make this simple for non-tech savys like me?
I'm confused with all this spec talk...
Can someone make this simple for non-tech savys like me?